Tài liệu chưa có tiêu đề
Tài liệu chưa có tiêu đề
Tài liệu chưa có tiêu đề
Choose the best answer to fill in the blank in the following sentences:
Unit 1:
1. _____is a medical specialty focused on providing care for the unique health needs of
older adults.
A. Geriatrix B. Geriatrician C. Geriatric D. Geriatrics
2. What Isolation room refer to?
A. A special hospital rooms that keep patients with certain medical conditions
separate from other people while they receive medical care.
B. A room provided for the use of people who are waiting to be seen by a doctor or dentist
or who are waiting in a station for a bus or train.
C. A special hospital rooms that keep patients with certain medical conditions separate from
other people after they receive medical care.
D. the department of a hospital that provides immediate treatment for acute illnesses and
trauma.
3. Psychiatrists and psychologists: what's the difference?
A. Psychiatrists understand how your brain works, psychologists are not.
B. Psychiatrists are medical doctors, psychologists are not.
C. Psychologists prescribe medication, Psychiatrists can't.
D. Psychologists understand how your brain works, Psychiatrists are not.
Unit 2:
4. The word root “mouth” means
A. Stomat/
B. Stomach/
C. Laryng/
D. Ot/
5. a small circular area, in particular the ring of pigmented skin surrounding a nipple.
A. Areola
B. Mamma
C. Alveola
D. Breast
6. a condition of the skin in which it becomes red, swollen, and sore, sometimes with small
blisters, resulting from direct irritation of the skin by an external agent or an allergic reaction to it.
A. Dermatitis
B. Cyanosis
C. Adenoma
D. Otitis
Unit 3:
7. What is the heaviest organ in the body?
A. Liver
B. Brain
C. Lung
D. Stomach
8. The organ responsible for both exocrine and endocrine function?
A. Liver
B. Gallbladder
C. Salivary
D. Sebaceous glands
9._________ is the hernia of urinary bladder:
A. Cystocele
B. Cholecystocele
C. Amenorrhea
D. Metrorrhagia
Unit 4:
10. A type of cells that formed and released into the bloodstream by precursor cells called
megakaryocytes
A. Platelets
B. Erythrocyte
C. Leukocyte
D. Macrophage
11. A substance that is naturally produced by the kidneys, and that stimulates the bone
marrow to make red blood cells.
A. Adrenalin
B. Erythropoietin
C. ESAs
D. Erythrocyte
12. A blood clot transported by the blood stream is a(n)
A. Platelet plug
B. Embolus
C. Thrombus
D. Thrombin clot
Unit 5:
13. How many bones are there in children?
A. 310
B. 320
C. 300
D. 206
14. The hormone promotes the growth of bone?
A. Testosterone
B. Adrenaline
C. PRH
D. Cortisol
15. Type of bone break most often leads to death in people over 65?
A. Skull fracture
B. Spine fracture
C. Hip fracture
D. Collarbone fracture
When a forensic expert examines a skeleton, they can tell:
A. Age
B. Gender
C. Certain causes of death
D. All of the above
Unit 6:
16. Dopamine is an important neurotransmitter. Which disease or disorder results when the
neurons in the brain that produce dopamine die?
A. Multiple sclerosis
B. Lou Gehrig disease (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis)
C. Parkinson disease
D. Seizure disorder
17.Cerebral palsy affects neurons in which part of the body?
A. Brain
B. Spine
C. Muscles
D. None of the above
18. What is a common neurotransmitter?
A. Acetylcholine
B. GABA
C. Serotonin
D. All of the above
19. A pair of hormones are increased when you face to stressed
A. Cortisol and adrenalin
B. Cortisol and andosterone
C. PRH and adrenalin
D. Adrenalin and andosterone
.....
II. Reading the text. Choose the best answer for each questions.
HORMONES
Hormones are substances that are secreted (or released) by cells that act to regulate the activity
of other cells in the body. As a result, many activities in the human body are regulated by
hormones. For example, reacting to fear, developing male or female characteristics, and growing
taller are all regulated by hormones. Hormones are important to keep your body functioning.
There are four major functions identified with hormones. Hormones regulate growth,
development, behavior, and reproduction. Hormones coordinate the production, use and storage
of energy. Hormones are involved in maintaining nutrition, metabolism, excretion, and water and
salt balance. And finally, hormones react to stimuli from outside the body.
Hormones act as chemical messengers that carry instructions to other cells to change their
activity. The heart beats faster as hormones carry instructions to the cells of the heart telling it to
increase the heartbeat. It was once believed that hormones had to travel through the
bloodstream, but scientists know today that that is not true. Some hormones act directly on
adjacent cells without traveling through the blood.
The message that a hormone carries is determined by both the hormone itself and the cell it is
carrying the message to. A hormone can instruct a cell to produce an enzyme or a specific
protein. Simply put, hormones can instruct a muscle cell to relax and a nerve cell to fire.
Each hormone is specific to the cell it is traveling to. Each hormone acts like a key that opens a
lock on or inside the cell. A hormone can only act on cells with the right lock.
Endocrine glands are important organs in the human body that hormones are secreted from. All
of the endocrine glands together make up the endocrine system. The endocrine system
coordinates the body's entire source of hormones.
There are several other organs that contain cells that secrete hormones. These organs include
the brain, stomach, small intestine, kidney, liver, and heart.
The endocrine system and the nervous system interact to coordinate the overall activity of the
body., and hormones play an important role.
The chemical messengers for the nervous system are known as neurotransmitters while the
chemical messengers for the endocrine system are known as hormones. There are some nerve
cells that are able to secrete hormones. For example, epinephrine is both a neurotransmitter and
a hormone.
Hormones are normally a slower-acting and longer-lived messenger whereas the
neurotransmitters are usually fast-acting and short-lived. The effect of a hormone can last for
days, weeks, or even years.
After a hormone is released from the cell in which it is made, they bind and act on target cells. A
target cell is a specific cell a hormone binds to and carries the message. If the hormone was not
specific, all the cells in the body would react to a hormone resulting in uncoordinated activities.
Finally, there are two main hormone classifications. They are either amino-acid-based hormones
or they are steroid-based hormones. Amino-acid-based hormones are water soluble and made
up of amino acids. Steroid-based hormones are lipid hormones made from cholesterol and are
fat soluble.
Since the human body makes more than 40 hormones, it is important that the release of them is
regulated regardless of which hormone is being produced.
36) How many hormones does the human body produce?
A: 2
B: 10
C: 25
D: 40
A: Growth
B: Development
C: Behavior
D: Hearing
38) Hormones coordinate the production, use, and storage of which of the following?
A: Energy
B: Emotions
C: Force
D: Balance
A: Fat soluble
B: Water soluble
C: Tissue soluble
D: Bone soluble
40) Which of the following times the time of the effects of hormone?
A: Seconds, minutes or even an hour
B: Minutes, hours, or even a day
C: Hours, days or even a week
D: Days, weeks or even a year