题目内容

肺癌需与哪些疾病相鉴别诊断及鉴别要点是什么

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支气管扩张症引起大咯血的原因是

A. 支气管动脉畸形
B. 合并重度支气管炎
C. 支气管动脉和肺动脉终末支破裂出血
D. 支气管囊性扩张
E. 支气管黏膜溃疡出血

患者男性,45岁,咳痰2个月余,声音嘶哑半个月,胸部透视见左肺门部病变,为确诊应采取下列措施,除了

A. 痰找细胞学
B. 胸部正侧位片
C. 经皮肺穿刺活检
D. 胸部CT
E. 纤维支气管镜检查

胸廓成形术治疗肺结核的原理错误的是

A. 使肺松弛和压缩,病肺得以休息
B. 可直接消灭病灶
C. 使空洞靠拢,消灭空腔
D. 压缩减缓局部血流,减少毒素吸收
E. 使局部缺氧不利于结核菌繁殖

Note: When more than one answer is required, these may be given in any order. Some choices may be required more than once. A= College of Health Careers B= Bee County College C= Community College Which college(s)... ·is locatedin the countryside 21. ______ · accepts applications all year round 22. ______ · enrolls students on a non-competitive basis 23. ______ · does not take in foreign students 24. ______ · offers courses in English and sociology 25. ______ · requires that students take at least 60 credits in order to graduate 26. ______ · boasts of the largest library collections 27. ______ · have choral group 28. ______ 29. ______ · provides dormitory and board at $2,220 30. ______ Overview A coed school founded 1967 that awards terminal associate degrees. 180 undergraduate students, 86% of freshmen return for a second year. The College Proprietary, on a 1-acre urban campus. Faculty: 23 (13 full-time). Computers: 40 terminals, PCs for student use in computer labs. Undergraduates 180 students from 8 states and territories. 95% women, 0% part-time, 70% state residents, 0% transferred. Fields chosen: 20% health professions and related sciences. Freshmen Application Entrance: moderately difficult. Options: early entrance, deferred entrance. Required: school transcript, recommendations, interview. Recommended SAT I or ACT. Test scores used for admission. Application deadline: rolling. Notification: continuous. Graduation Requirements 158 quarter credits; internship. Expenses Tuition: $5,495 full-time. Tuition guaranteed not to increase for student’s term of enrollment. College housing not available. College Life Safety: 24-hour emergency response devices. Major Veterinary technology. Bee C0unty Colleg Overview A coed school founded in 1965 that awards associate transfer and terminal degrees. 2,530 undergraduate students. 63% of freshmen return for a second year. The College County-supported, on a 100-acre rural campus. Faculty: 116 (74 full-time). Library: 46,000 books, 326 periodicals, 1,550 records, tapes, and CDs. Computers: 188 terminals, PCs for student use in computer center, computer labs, classrooms, learning resource center, library, learning assistance center. Undergraduates 2,530 students from 17 states and territories, 5 other countries. 60% women, 40% part-time, 9% transferred in, 47% have need-based financial aid. Most Popular recent majors: law enforcement/police sciences, nursing, child care/child and family studies. Freshmen Application Open admission. Options: early entrance, deferred entrance. Required: School transcript, TOEFL for international students. Recommended: SAT I or ACT. Test scores used for counseling/placement. Application deadline: 8/15. Graduation Requirements 55 semester hours; computer course for business, criminal justice, education, most vocational majors; internship (varies by major). Expenses Area resident tuition: $420 full-time. State resident tuition: $780 full-time. Nonresident tuition: $1,260 full-time. Part-time tuition per semester ranges from $87 to $174 for area residents, $59 to $318 for state residents, $252 to $504 for nonresidents. College room and board: $2,220. College room only: $1,060. College Life Drama-theatre group, choral group. Student services: personal-psychological counseling. Safety: controlled dormitory access, room security. Majors Accounting, agricultural sciences, art, biological sciences, business administration, chemistry, child and family studies, computer science, criminal justice, economics, education, engineering, English, finance, French, history, journalism, mathematics, music, nursing, police sciences, political science, sociology, theater. Community College Overview A coed school founded in 1957 that awards associate transfer and terminal degrees. 7,356 undergraduate students. The College State-supported, on a 52-acre urban campus. Faculty: 295 (150 full-time). Library: 50,000 books, 600 periodicals, 400 records, tapes, and CDs, Computers: 175 terminals, PCs for student use in computer center, learning resource center. Undergraduates 7,356 students from 27 states and territories. 63% women, 64% part-time, 97% state residents, 13% transferred in, 9% have need-based financial aid, 2% have non-need-based financial aid, 40% 25 or older, 1% native American, 1% Hispanic, 1% African American, 1% Hispanic, 69% Asian American. Freshmen Application Preference given to state residents. Options: early entrance. Required TOEFL for international students. Required for some: school transcript, recommendations, campus interview. Test scores used for admission. Application deadline: 7/1. Notification: continuous until 8/15. Graduation Requirements 60 credits; math/science requirements vary according to program; proficiency in a foreign language at beginning level; computer course for accounting, marketing, hotel operations, office administration majors; internship. Expenses State resident tuition: $480 full-time, $20 per credit part-time. Nonresident tuition: $2,920 full-time, 122 per credit part-time. Part-time mandatory fees per semester range from $5.50 to $10. Full-time mandatory fees: $20. Room and board: not available. College Life Orientation program. Choral group, student-run newspaper. Safety: 24 hour patrols. Majors Accounting, arts, data processing, food services management, hotel and restaurant management, legal secretarial studies, liberal arts, marketing, medical assistant technologies, nursing, paralegal studies, physical therapy, secretarial studies/office management.

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