Dear customers,We thank you for your patronage. Please note that contact information for AHS Software Co. has been changed as of August 28. Because of the closure of our Walgreen office and the ______ of our operations to Wendy Road, all correspondences regarding our products and services should now be sent to the following address:AHS Software Co. 1015 Wendy RoadOur employees" e-mail addresses, as well as our Web site"s address, www.ahssoftware.com, remain ______. However, we are still waiting for our new telephone and fax numbers. ______ will be updated on our Web site as soon as the new numbers are assigned as of September 3.We apologize for any inconvenience and thank you for your understanding.
A. decision
B. relocation
C. suspension
D. result
Emerald Hotel"s banquet room can accommodate up to 500 guests for private and business ______.
A. practices
B. unions
C. values
D. functions
Dietary studies have suggested that people who consume large amounts of vitamin A in foods, multi vitamins, or both are more likely to suffer hip fractures than are people who ingest modest amounts. New evidence bolsters these findings. Researchers have now correlated men"s blood concentrations of vitamin A with a later incidence of broken bones: a comparison that avoids the vagaries that plague diet-recall studies. Taken together, the new work and the diet studies raise knotty questions about the maximum amount of vitamin A that a person can safely ingest each day, says study coauthor Karl Michasson, an orthopedic surgeon at University Hospital in Uppsala, Sweden. He and his colleagues report the new findings in Jan. 23 New England Journal of Medicine. In the United States, the average daily intake of vitamin A through food, specially fish, eggs, and meat, is roughly 2,600 IU (international units) for men, and many multi-vitamins contain 5,000 IU. The US Institute of Medicine recommends that people get 2,300 to 3,000 IU of vitamin A each day and sets the safe upper limit around 10,000 IU. "I believe tiffs upper level should be lowered," Michasson says. When he and his colleagues gave the men dietary questionnaires, they learned that men ingesting as little as 5,000 IU of vitamin A per day were more prone to fractures than were men getting less. Manufacturers should lower the amount of vitamin A in multi-vitamin tablets and fortified foods, such as cereals, says Michasson. The new study began in the early 1970s when researchers stored blood samples from 2,047 men about 50 years old. Since then, 266 of the men have had at least one bone fracture. After dividing the men into five equal groups according to their blood vitamin A concentrations, the researchers found that men in the top group were nearly twice as likely as those in the middle group to have broken a bone. The correlation was particularly strong with fractures of the hip. "I think it"s pretty conclusive now that there"s a bad effect of vitamin A supplementation," says Margo A. Denke, an endocrinologist at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas. Elderly people may be at special risk because they"re slow to clear the vitamin from their bodies. Studies of animals have established that excess vitamin A stimulates the formation of cells that dissolve bone. However, since some vitamin A is necessary to maintain good eyesight and general health, Denke and Michasson agree that fully fortified foods and supplements should remain available in countries where poor nutrition puts people at risk of a vitamin A deficiency. High concentration of vitamin A may lead to fracture because
A. elderly people are slow in digesting vitamin A.
B. the absorption of excessive vitamin A makes people near-sighted.
C. it helps produce cells that weaken the bones of human beings,
D. vitamin A stays in human body for a long timid.