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坏死是指机体(活体)局部组织或细胞死亡。常见坏死的类型有凝固性坏死、液化性坏死、纤维素样坏死。

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医院感染的危险因索如下:①侵入性诊疗操作,破坏皮肤黏膜屏障,如外科手术、各种穿刺、各种插(留置)导管、气管切开等;②现代医疗新技术,如器官移植、人工装置(人工瓣膜、人工关节、人工晶体等);③损伤免疫功能的各种细胞毒药物、免疫抑制药、放射治疗等的广泛使用,如抗肿瘤药、肾上腺皮质激素、环孢素、60Co治疗等;④基础疾病致宿主免疫功能低下,如糖尿病、肝硬化、慢性肾炎、艾滋病、恶性肿瘤等;⑤使用能引起正常微生态失衡的抗菌药物,破坏机体正常微生态屏障;⑥其他原因,如医院消毒灭菌存在缺陷、医疗场所过于简陋等。

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At some point during their education, biology students are told about a conversation in a pub that took place over 50 years ago. J. B. S. Haldane, a British geneticist, was asked whether he would lay down his life for his country. After doing a quick calculation on the back of a napkin, he said he would do so for two brothers or eight cousins. In other words, he would die to protect the equivalent of his genetic contribution to the next generation.

The theory of kin selection--the idea that animals can pass on their genes by helping their close relatives--is biology’s explanation for seemingly altruistic acts. An individual carrying genes that promote altruism might be expected to die younger than one with "selfish" genes, and thus to have a reduced contribution to the next generation’s genetic pool. But if the same individual acts altruistically to protect its relatives, genes for altruistic behavior might nevertheless propagate.

Acts of apparent altruism to non-relatives can also be explained away, in what has become a cottage industry within biology. An animal might care for the offspring of another that it is unrelated to because it hopes to obtain the same benefits for itself later on (a phenomenon known as reciprocal altruism). The hunter who generously shares his spoils with others may be doing so in order to signal his superior status to females, and ultimately boost his breeding success. These apparently selfless acts are therefore disguised acts of self interest.All of these examples fit economists’ arguments that Homo sapiens is also Homo economicus--maximizing something that economists call utility, and biologists fitness. But there is a residuum of human activity that defies such explanations: people contribute to charities for the homeless, return lost wallets, do voluntary work and tip waiters in restaurants to which they do not plan to return. Both economic rationalism and natural selection offer few explanations for such random acts of kindness. Nor can they easily explain the opposite: spiteful behavior, when someone harms his own interest in order to damage that of another. But people are now trying to find answers.

When a new phenomenon is recognized by science, a name always helps. In a paper in Human Nature, Dr Fehr and his colleagues argue for a behavioral propensity they call "p reciprocity". This name is intended to distinguish it from reciprocal altruism. According to Dr Fehr, a person is a p reciprocator if he is willing to sacrifice resources to be kind to those who are being kind, and to punish those who are being unkind. Significantly, p reciprocators will behave this way even if doing so provides no prospect of material rewards in the future.

According the theory of kin selection, humans tend to act altruistically()

A. for the sake of desired reproduction

B. out of self-interest

C. on the request of natural selection

D. because of kind nature