首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
In 1751, Swedish botanist Carolus Linnaeus came up with the novel idea of using flowers as clocks. Morning glories open their tr
In 1751, Swedish botanist Carolus Linnaeus came up with the novel idea of using flowers as clocks. Morning glories open their tr
admin
2017-04-20
23
问题
In 1751, Swedish botanist Carolus Linnaeus came up with the novel idea of using flowers as clocks. Morning glories open their trumpet-like petals around 10 a. m. , water lilies at 11 and so on through evening primroses and moonflowers. A full array of these blossoms, planted in a circle, could indicate the time. It was a whimsical notion. But some 250 years later, scientists are seriously interested in the timekeeping mechanisms of nature. "They’re so ubiquitous, they’re almost a signature of life," says molecular neuroscientist Russell Foster of Imperil College, London.
From cockroaches to humans, Foster explores these internal clocks in a fascinating new book, Rhythm of Life, co-authored with British science writer Leon Kreitzman. The author show how the daily patterns known as circadian rhythms influence far more than our sleep. Heart attacks are more common in the morning. Women tend to go to labor in the evening. Severe asthma prevail at night. Although we may jet across time zones, circadian rhythms rule. The book traces the century-long quest to unravel their mechanisms, with some starting outcomes—including the recent discovery that certain genes switch on and off in 24 hour cycles. Even our responses to medicines may depend on when we take them.
Nature has devised internal clocks for a simple reason: they aid survival. "The early bird really does get the work,"—thanks to a silent wake-up call before dawn. A mimosa plant spreads its fernlike leaves during the day to create the maximum surface area for photosynthesis, then folds them up at night to reduce water-vapor loss. It’s not a mere response to light. "They do this even when kept in the dark," says biologist Eugene Maurakis of the Science Museum of Virginia.
In humans, the master clock is a tiny clump of cells in the brain called the suprachiasmatic nuclei. The clocks is reset daily by signals from a novel type of photoreceptor in the eye that Foster discovered. "The blind rely on it, too, provided their eyes haven’t been removed," he says. The result is an orchestrated series of biological events that unfolds in sequence. In the hours before breakfast, the body releases digestive enzymes gradually to be ready for the first meal. Temperature and blood pressure rise in preparation for the day’s demands. This helps explain the morning increase in the heart attacks. Cells reproduce at set times. Hormones rise and fall—many of them according to a predetermined schedule.
The implications for medicine are profound. By timing treatments to complement daily changes in biochemistry, the authors argues, we can boost efficacy and reduce side effects. In one seminal trial, medical oncologist William Hrushesky of the Dorn V. A. Medical Center in Columbia, S. C., found that by simply reversing the times when he administered two chemotherapeutic drugs, he could extend survival in women with advanced ovarian cancer from 11 percent at five years to 44 Chronobiology International, more than a dozen ailments can currently benefit from carefully timed treatments. In one recent study, he notes, something as simple as low-dose aspirin at bedtime reduced the rate of preterm deliver in pregnant women at risk for hypertension from 14 percent to zero. Aspirin in the morning had little effect. Surprised? Not to Foster and Kreitzman. As they show, timing is everything.
According to the book Rhythms of Life, which of the following statements is CORRECT?
选项
A、It is written by a molecular neuroscientist Foster.
B、Severe asthma is not common at night.
C、Medicines always function well provided that they have little side effects.
D、Circadian rhythms influence us in various aspects.
答案
D
解析
细节题。第二段第二句中指出,作者在书中写到,每日的生活模式,也就是生理节奏,不仅仅影响睡眠。紧接着又叙述各种病症在一天中都有高发时段。由此可以推出,生理节奏影响着我们生活的很多方面,故选[D]。第二段第一句指出,《生命的节奏》是Foster和另外一名科学家Leon Kretzman一起撰稿的,因此排除[A];根据第二段第五句可知,严重的哮喘常常在晚间发作,因此排除[B];根据第二段最后一句可知,甚至连我们对药物的反应也与服药时间有关,因此排除[C]。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/M8zK777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
AccordingtothenewWHOandSavetheChildren’sreport,
Greekfirefightersplannedtocontinuetoworkthroughthenightto【B1】______dozensof【B2】______,includingamassive【B3】_____
Acreditcardthatonlyworkswhenithearsitsowner’svoicehasbeendevelopedbyUSscientists.Researchershopethatthe【B1】
AsIwrite,agentle,muchneededrainisfallingthismorning.IthasbeenadryspringhereinVermont.Sodryinfact,thatt
Whenaspeechsoundchangesandbecomesmorelikeanothersoundthatfollowsorprecedesit,itissaidtobe
______isoneofthebestnaturalisticAmericannovels.
Wewentfishingthefirstmorning.Ifellthesamedampmosscoveringthewormsinthebaitcan,andsawthedragonflyalighton
PASSAGETHREEWhydidtheauthorearnthenicknameCaptainCalamity?
PASSAGETHREEWhydoesachimpstepintostopafightbetweentwoothers?
PASSAGEONE
随机试题
慢性呼吸衰竭患者发生院内获得性支气管-肺部感染的最多见的病原菌有()(2007年)
男性,24岁,高热、流涕、咳嗽4天,于2001年4月7日入院。入院1天后出现呼吸困难,胸部X线片示双肺透亮度降低,经抗感染治疗患者症状不见缓解,呼吸困难进一步加重,胸部X线片示双肺呈白肺,R35次/min,血气分析(FiO229%)示pH7.35,PaO2
痹证日久,可由经络累及脏腑,其多见
患者,男,28岁。上呼吸道感染后2周,出现肉眼血尿、颜面水肿入院。体检:血压20/13.5kPa(150/100mmHg),尿蛋白(+),尿红细胞满视野,血肌酐180μmol/L。(假设信息)如果患者按上述诊断治疗2个月,尿检蛋白(++),红细
按照《民事诉讼法》规定,公示催告的期间不得少于()。
公司制企业的类型有()。
甲公司采用分期付款方式购入大型设备一套,当日投入使用。合同约定的价款为3000万元,分3年等额支付;该分期支付购买价款的现值为2730万元。假定不考虑其他因素,甲公司该设备的入账价值为()万元。
若处理器有16位地址,则它的虚拟地址空间为()。
设函数f(x)连续,且已知f(1)=1,求的值.
A、Margaretmakesalotofplans.B、Margaretgetsthingsdone.C、Margaretdoeswhatotherswant.D、Margaretisagoodleader.B
最新回复
(
0
)