单选题患者关节疼痛。痛无定处病因为
单选题气短乏力,脉虚,面色恍白,出血淡红等表现的证候为
单选题气滞证的临床表现特点是
单选题阳证痈疡肿毒初起,治疗常用
单选题下列选项,以泻火通便,清上泄下为功用的是
单选题望色十法中,散抟主A.病之表里B.病之阴阳C.病之新久D.病之虚实
单选题下列肝胆病中,哪项不见眩晕
单选题属虚证的疮疡,触按局部时表现为
单选题“金元四大家”在诊断方面,注重辩脉重视四诊合参的医家是
单选题泻下黄褐臭秽稀便,排便不爽者,其病机是A.暑热内蕴B.脾气虚弱C.湿热内阻D.肝郁脾虚
单选题二经病或三经病同时发生的为
单选题舌苔白厚如积粉,多为A.食积内停B.时邪夹湿C.痰饮上泛D.痰湿化热
单选题列选项中,不属于平脉生理变异的是
单选题小儿指纹透关射甲为A.邪气入络B.邪气入经C.邪入脏腑,病情较重D.病凶险,预后不良
单选题患者惊悸不寐,烦躁不宁,胸胁胀痛,头晕日眩,舌苔黄腻,脉弦滑,为( )(1994年第25题)
单选题下列脉象。除哪项外,均主实证
单选题舌体胖大,有齿痕,主
单选题太息多因( )(1995年第18题)
单选题目眦色赤,多属
单选题Young girls at high risk for depression appear to have a malfunctioning reward system in their brains, a new study suggests. The finding comes from research that (1) a high-risk group of 13 girls, aged 10 to 14, who were not depressed but had mothers who (2) recurrent depression and a low-risk group of 13 girls with no (3) or family history of depression. Both groups were given MRI brain (4) while completing a task that could (5) either reward or punishment. (6) with girls in the low-risk group, those in the high-risk group had (7) neural responses during both anticipation and receipt of the reward. (8) , the high-risk girls showed no (9) in an area of the brain called the dorsal anterior cingulated cortex (背侧前扣带皮质), believed to play a role in (10) past experiences to assist learning. The high-risk girls did have greater activation of this brain area (11) receiving punishment, compared with the other girls. The researchers said that this suggests that high-risk girls have easier time (12) information about loss and punishment than information about reward and pleasure. "Considered together with reduced activation in the striatal (纹状体的) areas commonly observed (13) reward, it seems that the reward-processing system is critically (14) in daughters who are at elevated risk for depression, (15) they have not yet experienced a depressive (16) ," wrote Ian H. Gotlib, of Stanford University, and his colleagues. " (17) , longitudinal studies are needed to determine whether the anomalous activations (18) in this study during the processing of (19) and losses are associated with the (20) onset of depression," they concluded. The study was published in the April of the Archives of General Psychiatry.
