题目内容

患者男性,37岁,农民。用乐果喷洒果树,出现恶心、呕吐、出汗。查体可见神志清楚,心肺未闻异常。 该患者容易出现以下哪些表现

A. 迟发性多发性神经病
B. 中间型综合征
C. 过敏性皮炎
D. 呼吸肌麻痹
E. 肺水肿

查看答案
更多问题

患者女性,28岁,明显基础代谢增高症状和交感神经兴奋症状,突眼,甲状腺Ⅲ度大,质软,可闻及杂音。 患者服药后停药的指征

A. 甲状腺肿消失
B. TSAb转为阴性
C. T3T4正常
D. TSH正常
E. TSH降低

1 Even today, when air and road travel has made Africa so readily accessible to Europeans and Americans, there are innumerable aspects of African life which tend to take one by surprise. The unfamiliar lies hidden everywhere, and the presence of Western culture seems merely to emphasize this unfamiliarity. Basically, the essence of our reaction to the strange, the unfamiliar, is a sense of fear. Every country contains landscapes that arouse unease—whether it be some remote Alpine valley, the wild lavender fields of Upper Province, or a lonely Norwegian fjord at twilight. But in my own experience West Africa contains more weird and eerie regions—rainforest, mangrove swamp, parched plains of red earth—than any other place that I have seen. It is not only in the foreigner that these land- scapes evoke fear. A large part of all old African religions is devoted to soothing the un- known and the unseen—evil spirits which live in a particular tree or a particular rock, a thousand varieties of ghosts and witches, the ever-present spirits of dead ancestors or rela- tives. I have myself been kept awake at night in Calabar by a friend from Lagos who was convinced that the witches of the east were out to get him, or that he was about to be kid- napped and eaten. During four and a half hours in a canoe along the creeks of the Niger delta, gliding over the still and colorless water beneath an equally still and colorless but burn- ing sky, I, too, have experienced a sense of fear, or at least a sense of awe. Except for the ticking of the little outboard engine the silence was complete. On either hand stretched the silver-white swamps of mangrove, seeming, with their awkward exposed roots, to be standing knee-deep in the water. Where the creek narrowed you could peer deep into these thickets of mangroves--vistas secret, interminable and somehow meaningless. There was no sign of life except for the shrill screech of some unseen bird. I was on my way to the ancient slaving port of Bonny, which we reached in late afternoon. Scrambling up some derelict stone steps (slithery with slime and which had managed to detach themselves from the landing-stage so that you had to jump a two-foot gap to reach wet land), I found myself in an area of black mud and tumbled blocks of stone. "Mangrove" means______.

A. a sort of bird
B. a sort of man
C. a sort of tree
D. a sort of animal

5 Archaeology as a profession faces two major problems. First, it is the poorest of the poor. Only paltry sums are available for excavating and even less is available for publishing the results and preserving the sites once excavated. Yet archaeologists deal with priceless objects every day. Second, there is the problem of illegal excavation, resulting in museumquality pieces being sold to the highest bidder. I would like to make an outrageous suggestion that would at one stroke provide funds for archaeology and reduce the amount of illegal digging. I would propose that scientific archaeological expeditions and governmental authorities sell excavated artifacts on the open market. Such sales would provide substantial funds for the excavation and preservation of archaeological sites and the publication of results. At the same time, they would break the illegal excavator’s grip on the market, thereby decreasing the inducement to engage in illegal activities. You might object that professionals excavate to acquire knowledge, not money. Moreover, ancient artifacts are part of our global cultural heritage, which should be available for all to appreciate, not sold to the highest bidder. I agree. Sell nothing that has unique artistic merit or scientific value. But, you might reply, everything that comes out of the ground has scientific value. Here we part company. Theoretically, you may be correct in claming that every artifact has potential scientific value. Practically, you are wrong. I refer to the thousand pottery vessels and ancient lamps that are essentially duplicates of one another. In one small excavation in Cyprus, archaeologists recently uncovered 2,000 virtually indistinguishable small jugs in a single courtyard. Even precious royal seal impres- sions known as I’melekh handles have been found in abundance-more than 4,000 examples so far. The basements of museums are simply not large enough to store the artifacts that are likely to be discovered in the future. There is not enough money even to catalogue the finds; as a result, they cannot be found again and become as inaccessible as if they had never been discovered. Indeed, with the help of a computer, sold artifacts could be more accessible than are the pieces stored in bulging museum basements. Prior to sale, each could be photographed and the list of the purchasers could be maintained on the computer. A purchaser could even be required to agree to return the piece if it should become needed for scientific purposes. The primary purpose of the passage is to propose______.

A. an alternative to museum display of artifacts
B. a way to curb illegal digging while benefiting the archaeological profession
C. the governmental regulation of archaeological sites
D. a new system for cataloguing duplicate artifacts

(由单选和多选组成。) 贾某为了营利,于2008年3月在沿国道的自己耕地内建设了五间楼房,来经营餐饮住宿,但楼房的建设并未获得相关部门的批准,2010年4月县土地局发现了贾某的违章建设房屋的行为;在此期间,贾某还曾多次对前来收缴税款的税务人员进行殴打,其中一次造成一名税务人员重伤。 下列对于贾某的违法建房行为处理哪些是正确的( )。

A. 由于贾某的违法行为至今已超过了2年追溯时效,所以无法对贾某的违法行为进行追究
B. 由于贾某建造违法建筑物的行为是一种出于继续状态的违法行为,何时发现都可以进行行政处罚
C. 如果贾某的违法行为是由本村村民于2010年4月举报的,以举报时间为时效起算点
D. 如果鉴于贾某的违法行为十分严重,要给予较重的行政处罚,县土地局在作出处罚决定前要由部门负责人集体讨论决定

答案查题题库