问题
单项选择题 A1/A2型题
甲状腺功能亢进患者心脏可能出现下列哪项改变()。
A.第一心音减弱
B.心动过缓
C.心律失常
D.心前区疼痛
E.心肌梗死
答案
参考答案:C
解析:甲状腺功能亢进患者可能出现窦性心动过速、心尖部第一心音亢进、心律失常等症状。
甲状腺功能亢进患者心脏可能出现下列哪项改变()。
A.第一心音减弱
B.心动过缓
C.心律失常
D.心前区疼痛
E.心肌梗死
参考答案:C
解析:甲状腺功能亢进患者可能出现窦性心动过速、心尖部第一心音亢进、心律失常等症状。
Now you’re a fool for helping. “I don’t want to get involved” seems to have become a national motto. One summer I was driving from my hometown of Tahoe City, California to New Orleans, Louisiana. In the middle of the desert, I passed a young man standing by the roadside. He had his out and held a gas can in his other hand. I drove right by him. There was a time you’d be called a jerk (混蛋) for passing by somebody . Several days later I was still about the hitchhiker (搭便车的人), about how I didn’t even lift my foot the accelerator (加速踏板) for him. “Does anyone stop any more?” I wondered. I recalled Blanche DuBois’s famous line—”I have always depended on the kindness of strangers.” Was that these days? One way to test this would be for a person to journey the US without any money, just on the good will of others. What would happen? Would he find food, shelter and support? The idea intrigued (激起兴趣) me. The week I 37, I realized that I had never done something truly crazy. I decided to really do it: travel from the Pacific to the Atlantic without a penny. I would only accept of rides, food and places to sleep. For six weeks I hitched 82 rides and covered 4,223 miles across 14 states. I was treated kindly I went. I was by people’s readiness to help a stranger. In Oregon, a house painter named Mike the cold weather and asked if I had a coat. I didn’t, so he gave me a big green army-style jacket. A lumber-mill worker in Michigan named Tim invited me to a dinner with his family in their shabby house. Then he offered me a tent. I refused, but Tim insisted, packing it into my bag himself. I found people were generally compassionate. Hearing I had no money and would take none, people bought me food or with them whatever they happened to have. Those who had the to give often gave the most. I’m to all the people I met for their rides, their food, their shelter and their gifts. My faith in ordinary folks was . I was proud to live in a country where people were still willing to help. In spite of everything, you can still depend on the of strangers.
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