问题 问答题 简答题

何谓多器官衰竭?

答案

参考答案:

过去称多系统器官衰竭(multiplesystemorganfailure,MSOF),现称多器官衰竭(multipleorganfailure,MOF),是指在严重感染、创伤、大手术、病理产科等后,同时或序贯地发生两个以上器官功能衰竭的临床综合征。它发病急,进展快,病死率高。但患者在发生MOF之前,大多器官功能良好,发生之后,一旦治愈,一般说不留器官的永久性损伤,也不转为慢性。因此不同于濒死前的全身衰竭。近年来名称被多脏器功能失常综合征(MultipleorganDysfunctionSyndrom,MODS)所代替,比较符合临床实际。但也有的学者认为,MOF是MODS病情发展的结果。发病机理尚不十分清楚,是需要进一步探索的新课题。

阅读理解

阅读理解。

                                               Waste to Energy-JUST BURN IT!

     WHY BURN WASTE?

     Waste-to-energy plants generate (产生) enough electricity to supply 2.4 million households in the US. But,

provrding electricity is not the major advantage of waste-to-energy plants. In fact, it costs more to generate

electrlcity at a waste-to-energy plant than it does at a coal, nuclear, or hydropower plant.

     The maior advantage of burning waste is that it considerably reduces the amount of trash going to landfills.

The average American produces more than l,600 pounds of waste a year. If all this waste were landfilled, it

would take more than two cubic yards of landfill space. That's the volume of a box three feet long, three feet

wide, and six feet high. If that waste were burned, the ashes would fit into a box three feet long, three feet

wide, but only nine inches high!

     Some communities in the Northeast may be running out of land for new landfills. And, since most people

don't want landfills in their backyards, it has become more difficult to obtain permits to build new landfms.

Taking the country as a whole, the United States has plenty of open space, of course, but it is expensive to

transport garbage a long distance to put it mto a landfill.

TO BURN OR NOT TO BURN?

     Some people are concerned that burning garbage may harm the environment. Like coal plants, waste-to-

energy plants produce air pollution when the fuel is bumed to produce steam or electricity. Burning garbage

releases the chemicals and substances found in the waste. Some chemicals can be a threat to people, the

environment, or both, if they are not properly controlled.

     Some critics of waste-to-energy plants are afraid that burning waste will hamper (妨碍, 阻碍) recycling

programs. If everyone sends their trash to a waste-to-energy plant, they say, there will be little motive to

recycle. Several states have considered or are cons idering banning waste-to-energy plants unless recycling

programs are in place. Massachusetts, New Jersey, and New York City have delayed new waste-to-energy

plants, hoping to increase the level of recycling first.

     So, what's the real story? Can recycling and burning waste coexist? At first glance, recycling and waste-

to-energy seem to be at odds (不一致), but they can actually complement (弥补) each other. That's because

it makes good sense to recycle some materials, and better sense to burn others.

     Let's look at aluminum, for example. Aluminum mineral is so expensive to mine that recycling aluminum

more than pays for itself. Burning it produces no energy. So clearly, aluminum is valuable to recycle and not

useful to burn.

     Paper, on the other hand, can either be burned or recycled-it all depends on the price the used paper will

bring. Plastics are another matter. Because plastics are made from petroleum and natural gas, they are excellent

sources of energy for waste-to-energy plants. This is especially true since plastics are not as easy to recycle

as steel, aluminum, or paper.

     Plastics almost always have to be hand sorted and making a product from recycled plastics may cost more

than making it from new materials.

     To burn or not to burn is not really the question. We should use both recycling and waste-to-energy as

alternatives to landfilling.

                                               Waste to Energy-JUST BURN IT!

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