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More about Alzheimer's Disease

    Scientists have developed skin tests that may be used in the future to identify people with Alzheimer's disease and may ultimately allow physicians to predict     1    is at risk of getting this neurological disorder.
    The only current means of     2    the disease in a living patient is a long and expensive series of tests that eliminate every other cause of dementia (痴呆).
    "Since Alois Alzheimer described the     3    nearly a century ago, people have been trying to find a way to     4    diagnose it in its early stages," said Patricia Grady, acting director of the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke in Bethesda, Maryland. "This discovery, if     5    , could prove a big step forward in our efforts to deal with and understand the disease."
    Alzheimer's is the single greatest     6    of mental deterioration (退化) in older people, affecting between 2.5 million and 4 million people in the United States     7    . The devastating disorder gradually destroys memory and the ability to function, and eventually causes death. There is currently no known     8    for the disease.
    Researches     9    that the skin cells of Alzheimer's patients have defects that interfere with their ability to regulate the flow of potassium (钾) in and out of the cells. The fact that the cell defects are present in the skin suggests that Alzheimer's     10    from physiological changes throughout the body, and that dementia may be the first noticeable effect of these changes as the defects     11    the cells in the brain, scientists said.
    The flow of potassium is especially     12    in cells responsible for memory formation. The scientists also found two other defects that affect the cells' supply of calcium (钙), another critical element.
    One test developed by researches calls     13    growing skin cells in a laboratory culture and then testing them with an electrical detector to determine if the microscopic tunnels that     14    the flow of potassium are open. Open potassium channels create a unique electrical signature.
    A spokesman for the Alzheimer's Association said that if the validity of the diagnostic test can be proven it would be an important     15    , but cautioned that other promising tests for Alzheimer's have been disappointing.1. 
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】 该句为从句,who指代people with Alzheimer's disease,指代人的时候用who,故选D。