单选题 ATIME columnist bears witness to an operation to help triplets with cerebral palsy walk like other boys.
Cindy Hickman nearly bled to death the day she gave birth—three months prematurely—to her triplet sons. Weighing less than 2 lbs. each, her babies were alive, but barely. They clung so tenuously to life that her doctors recommended she name them A, B and C. Then, after a year of heroic interventions—brain shunts, tracheotomies, skull remodeling—often requiring emergency helicopter rides to the hospital nearest their rural Tennessee home, the Hickmans learned that their triplets had cerebral palsy.
Fifteen years ago there wasn"t much that could be done about cerebral palsy, a disorder caused by damage to the motor centers of the brain. But pediatric medicine has come a long way since then, both in intervention before birth, with better prenatal care and various techniques to postpone delivery, and surgical interventions after birth to correct physical deficiencies. So although the incidence of cerebral palsy seems to be increasing (because the odds of preemies surviving are so much better), so too are the number of success stories.
This is one of them. Lane, Codie and Wyatt (as the Hickman boys are called) have spastic cerebral palsy, the most common form, accounting for nearly 80% of cases. "We first noticed that they weren"t walking when they should," Cindy recalls. "Instead they were only doing the combat crawl." Their brains seemed to be developing age appropriately, but their muscles were unnaturally stiff, making walking difficult if not impossible.
Happily, spastic cerebral palsy is also the most treatable form of CP, largely thanks to a procedure known as selective dorsal rhizotomy, in which the nerve roots that are causing the problem are isolated and severed. Among the first to champion SDR in the U.S. in the late 1980s was Dr. T.S. Park, a Korean-born pediatric neurosurgeon at Washington University in St. Louis, Mo., who has preformed more than 800 of these operations and hopes to do an additional 1,000 before he retires.
Peering through a microscope and guided by an electric probe, we were able to distinguish between the two groups of nerve roots leaving the spinal cord. The ventral roots send information to the muscle; the dorsal roots send information back to the spinal cord. The dorsal roots cause spasticity, and if just the right ones are severed, the symptoms can be greatly reduced.
Nearly half a million Americans suffer from cerebral palsy. Not all are candidates for SDR, but Park estimates that as many as half may be. He gets the best results with children between ages 2 and 6 who were born prematurely and have stiffness only in their legs. He is known for performing the operation very high up in the spine, right where the nerve roots exit the spinal cord. It"s riskier that way, but the recovery is faster, and in Park"s skilled hands, the success rate is higher.
Cindy and Jeremy Hickman will testify to that. Just a few weeks after the procedure, two of their sons are walking almost normally and the third is rapidly improving.
单选题 When the triplets were born, ______.
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】[解析] 细节题。从第一段的首句得知:Cindy差点流血致死(bled to death),三个孩子也是奄奄一息(alive,but barely)。这和选项A是一致的。D选项(接受一些医疗干预手段)是混淆项,文中并未提及三胞胎在出生的时候所受的治疗。故答案为A。
单选题 Cerebral palsy is ______.
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】[解析] 正误判断题。因本题定位困难,可用排除法解。从全文来看,这种病并非是致命的,反而是可治疗的,A不对;文中并未提及麻痹症超过6岁就治疗不了,只是在倒数第二段提到帕克医生治疗对象中2~6岁的儿童恢复最好,C错误;这种病因是大脑某区域的破坏导致的某种混乱,但并未说明是大脑的混乱,因此B为混淆项。从文章倒数第三段的最后一句可知D为正确选项。故答案为D。
单选题 There are more and more cases of cerebral palsy ______.
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】[解析] 细节题。答案源自于文章第二段最后一句话中括号里的内容:早产儿存活几率上升。
单选题 Dr. T. S. Park ______.
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】[解析] 细节题。从第四段第二句可知:他是美国首批采用SDR手术的医生。尽管A选项中没有指明美国这个范围,但是选项中pioneer(先驱)是在任何范围内都可以用来形容他的。C选项中ambitious(雄心勃勃)是一个态度词,原文未作评价,是混淆项。故答案为A。
单选题 SDR is a procedure of ______.
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】[解析] 细节题。因定位困难,因此可用排除法解。SDR是对早产儿出生后施行的手术,A(延迟分娩)是错误信息;C选项中(either:任何一个)不符合原文;D(风险高但收效大)看似正确,但是全文只是对Park医生擅长施行高位手术进行了评价,并未对SDR进行宽范围的评论,因此也是混淆项。故答案为B。