问题 单项选择题

胸膜腔内压等于

A.大气压一非弹性阻力

B.大气压+跨肺压

C.大气压+跨胸壁压

D.大气压一肺弹性回缩力

E.大气压+肺弹性回缩力

答案

参考答案:D

解析:此题是对概念的理解分析题,考查学生对胸膜腔内压的理解。  胸膜腔内压又称胸内压。胸膜腔内压受两种方向相反力的影响。即大气压与肺弹性回缩力,所以胸内压一大气压一肺弹性回缩力(D),若将大气压作为零,则:胸内压一一肺弹性回缩力,所以,胸内压实际上是由肺回缩力所决定的。本题答案A、B、C中除大气压外,涉及的概念均与胸膜腔内压无直接关系,而答案E中肺弹性回缩力与大气压方向一致,则不会形成正常胸内压,因此。本题正确答案为D.

单项选择题
单项选择题

On cold days in Delhi, the poor light bonfires (篝火) of tyres, trees and rags whose fumes mix with the exhaust from the city’s 2 million vehicles to form a thick smog. On most days in Mexico City, a blanket of pollution cuts off views of the surrounding mountains. On one famous occasion it got so bad that birds fell dead out of the sky on to the Zocalo, the city’s main square. Throughout the developing world, smogs in many big cities are getting worse as more people use cars and more manufacturing firms are belching out (喷出) pollution. Congestion is on the rise. too: according to one estimate, a car in Bangkok now spends the equivalent of 40 days a year stuck in traffic. The air in Asia’s cities, like the water in its rivers, is particularly unhealthy, containing levels of dust and smoke several times higher than in the rich countries’ cities.

Environmentalists in the developed world also worry about air pollution in poorer countries. not just out of the goodness of their hearts but because they fear it may affect their own backyard. Carbon-dioxide emissions, thought to be the cause of global warming, are growing particularly fast in developing countries. So are emissions of sulphur dioxide, blamed for acid rain. which sometimes falls hundreds of miles from the source of the pollution.

But the harm that air pollution causes in the developing countries themselves is much more serious and immediate. The biggest concern are indoor air pollution, lead emissions and small particles. Indoor pollution in poor countries is not much talked about, but it is often as damaging to health as smoking cigarettes. Around a third of all energy consumed in developing countries comes from wood, crop residues and dung, which are often burnt in poorly designed stoves within ill-ventilated (通风很差的) huts. Studies of women in India and Nepal exposed to smoke from such fuels show that their death rates from chronic respiratory disease are similar to those of heavy smokers.

Lead has long been known to be dangerous in large doses. But only since the 1970s have scientists been aware that relatively small quantities of lead in the bloodstream can be harmful to humans. In particular, many studies show a correlation between levels of lead in children’s blood and lower IQ scores, hearing loss and hyperactivity (活动过度).

But the kind of air pollution thought to cause the most damage to human health in developing countries is that from small particles. Caused by vehicle exhausts, coal-burning smoke from factories and dust stirred up by vehicles, these particles easily find their way into people’s lungs. Studies the world over have shown a p positive correlation between small particles in the air and death rates.

Small particles mainly damage ().

A. lungs

B. eyes

C. bloodstream

D. heart