时间:2019-01-19 作者:英语课 分类:环球英语 Spotlight


英语课

  Voice 1

Hello. I’m Mike Procter.

Voice 2

And I’m Marina Santee. Welcome to Spotlight 1. This programme uses a special English method of broadcasting. It is easier for people to understand, no matter where in the world they live.

Voice 4

‘A young girl from North India suffered terrible face injuries. Her hair got caught in a grass cutting machine. The machine pulled her whole face from her head. Her parents watched with horror 2 as her face fell to the ground.’

Voice 2

You may remember Sandeep Kaur, from northern India. She suffered a terrible accident in 1994. She was only nine [9] years old. Sandeep’s hair got caught in a grass cutting machine. The machine pulled away her whole face from her head. Sandeep’s parents put the face in a container with ice. At the hospital doctors did the impossible. They attached her face back to her head! This was the world’s first face ‘replant.’ They re-attached her face.

Voice 2

Since then, doctors have moved forward with this technology. They can now perform face transplants 4. That is, doctors can give someone a completely different face! The first face transplant 3 was in November 2005. Doctors performed the operation at Amiens University Hospital, in France. Their patient was Isabelle Dinoire. Unlike Sandeep, doctors could not re-attach Isabelle’s face. It was too badly damaged. Instead, they gave her a completely different face. They performed a face transplant.

Voice 1

Isabelle needed a transplant because of earlier events. In May 2005 a dog attacked Isabelle. The dog bit off her nose, lips and chin. Isabelle has no memory of the event. She can just remember waking up. She was lying on the floor surrounded by blood.

Voice 2

Doctors in the hospital looked at her face. They were not hopeful. They did not think they could repair the damage. After a short period, a different doctor examined Isabelle. His name was Doctor Devauchelle. He believed he could help her. He suggested a face transplant.

Voice 1

Other transplants are more common. People with diseased organs need new ones. Doctors take healthy organs from people who have recently died. These people are called organ donors 6. They ‘donate’, give, their organs. Doctors can remove a patient’s diseased organ. And they put the donor 5’s organ in its place. They ‘transplant it.’ Doctors have transplanted 7 the liver 8, heart and kidneys 9. They had also transplanted ears and hair. But no one had ever transplanted a face!!

Voice 2

Doctors in France decided 10 that this was the best operation for Isabelle Dinoire. They discussed it with her. And she agreed. They used the face from a young woman, Maryline St. Aubert. Sadly, Maryline had killed herself. But she did not damage the skin on her face. Maryline’s family permitted the doctors to use this skin for Isabelle. The operation took fifteen hours. First, doctors had to remove the skin from Maryline’s face. They then placed it onto Isabelle’s face. They used Maryline’s skin to cover Isabelle’s nose, mouth and chin. It was the world’s first ‘part’ face transplant. After the operation Isabelle said,

Voice 3

‘At first I was afraid to look at myself. But when I did, it was already great! I could not believe it. I thought my face would be big and blue. But it was already beautiful.’

Voice 1

The face transplant has caused some debate. Some experts are concerned about the emotional 11 and mental effects. The face is one of the most individual parts of the body. Many people connect the way they look with who they are. Patients have to accept their new look as a part of them. They have to get used to seeing a different face every day. This can be very difficult. But Isabelle said,

Voice 3

‘It may be someone else’s face. But when I look in the mirror the face I see is me.’

Voice 2

Another concern is the donor’s family. Isabelle’s donor was Maryline St. Aubert. People ask what affect a face transplant will have on Maryline’s family. What happens when a donor’s family see the patient wearing their dead daughter’s face? But doctors make it clear that patients will not look anything like their donors. They may use the skin from someone else’s face. But it is the bone structure that gives the face its shape. So Isabelle does not now look like Maryline. However, she does not look like she did before. Doctors say it is more like creating a ‘third face.’

Voice 1

Some people are concerned about face transplants for moral 12 reasons. They say that the operation puts looks above health. Face transplants are very dangerous. This danger may be too great just for the way a person looks. But other experts argue that living with a face that looks very strange can have terrible effects also. It can force a person to live alone, afraid of people’s reactions.

Voice 2

Technology for face transplants will create new choices for people. This is not just for people who have suffered injuries. It includes people with other problems - such as diseases 13 that mark their faces. Doctors have the technology to give people whole new faces - if they wish.

Voice 1

But not everyone does! Marc Crank is thirty four [34] years old. He was born with a serious condition. It causes raised skin growths, or tumours 14, to grow on his face and head. He has had many operations to remove the tumours. And the operations have damaged his face. Marc says his condition has left him with an ‘unusual face.’ But, he states that he would not like a face transplant. He says,

Voice 5

‘To perform a face transplant just to make my appearance more acceptable 15 to the world is not right. It should not matter that I look different from other people. Maybe it is time to stop judging a person by the way they look. It is what they are like as a person inside that really matters. If you want to help people with facial damage then get to know them. Accept them as they are. Welcome them into your home and into your community. This would be a far more effective treatment than any operation.’

Voice 2

Medical experts continue to debate these difficult moral and medical issues. But to Isabelle Dinoire a face transplant saved her life. She said,

Voice 3

‘I have been saved. Lots of people write saying that I need to go on. That is wonderful. It is a miracle 16 somehow.’

Voice 2

She also expressed her thanks to Maryline’s family.

Voice 3

‘They were sad. They were mourning. Yet they agreed to give a second life to people. Thanks to them there is a future for me and for others.’

 



n.公众注意的中心,聚光灯,探照灯,视听,注意,醒目
  • This week the spotlight is on the world of fashion.本周引人瞩目的是时装界。
  • The spotlight followed her round the stage.聚光灯的光圈随着她在舞台上转。
n.惊骇,恐怖,惨事,极端厌恶
  • The public has been awakened to the full horror of the situation.公众完全意识到了这一状况的可怕程度。
  • The thought of working nights fills me with abject horror.一想到要夜间工作我就觉得惨兮兮的。
n.移植的器官或植物;v.使迁移,使移居
  • Some plants do not transplant well.有些植物不宜移植。
  • Several of the patients had received kidney transplant.病人中有几位已接受了肾移植手术。
n.(器官、皮肤、头发等的)移植( transplant的名词复数 );移植的器官,移植物
  • The heart transplants have been read about and discussed everywhere. 人们已读到关于心脏移植的报道,到处都在议论此事。 来自《简明英汉词典》
  • A number of terms are used in various classifications of transplants. 移植物的各种分类中应用了一系列的名词。 来自辞典例句
n.捐献者;赠送人;(组织、器官等的)供体
  • In these cases,the recipient usually takes care of the donor afterwards.在这类情况下,接受捐献者以后通常会照顾捐赠者。
  • The Doctor transplanted the donor's heart to Mike's chest cavity.医生将捐赠者的心脏移植进麦克的胸腔。
n.捐赠者( donor的名词复数 );献血者;捐血者;器官捐献者
  • Please email us to be removed from our active list of blood donors. 假如你想把自己的名字从献血联系人名单中删去,请给我们发电子邮件。
  • About half this amount comes from individual donors and bequests. 这笔钱大约有一半来自个人捐赠及遗赠。 来自《简明英汉词典》
vt.移植(transplant的过去式与过去分词形式)
  • Surgeons have successfully transplanted a liver into a four-year-old boy. 外科医生成功地给一个四岁的男孩移植了肝脏。
  • A group of farmers were transplanted to the island by the government. 一批农民被政府迁到这个岛上居住。 来自《简明英汉词典》
n.肝;肝脏
  • He has a weak liver.他的肝脏不好。
  • The largest organ in the body is the liver.人体最大的器官是肝脏。
肾形矿脉; 肾,肾脏( kidney的名词复数 ); (可食用的动物的)腰子
  • The function of the kidneys is to excrete wastes from the body. 肾的功能是排泄人体里的废物。
  • She got a very dangerous disease of kidneys. 她得了一种很危险的肾病。
adj.决定了的,坚决的;明显的,明确的
  • This gave them a decided advantage over their opponents.这使他们比对手具有明显的优势。
  • There is a decided difference between British and Chinese way of greeting.英国人和中国人打招呼的方式有很明显的区别。
adj.令人动情的;易动感情的;感情(上)的
  • Emotional people don't stop to calculate.感情容易冲动的人做事往往不加考虑。
  • This is an emotional scene in the play.这是剧中动人的一幕。
adj.道德(上)的,有道德的;n.品行,寓意,道德
  • Moral beauty ought to be ranked above all other beauty.品德之美应列于其他美之上。
  • He deceived us into believing that he could give us moral support.他骗得我们相信他能给我们道义上的支持。
n.疾病( disease的名词复数 );弊端;恶疾;痼疾
  • Smoking is a causative factor in several major diseases. 抽烟是引起几种严重疾病的病因。
  • The illness frequently coexists with other chronic diseases. 这种病往往与其他慢性病同时存在。
肿瘤( tumour的名词复数 )
  • Blood vessels develop abnormally in cancer tumours. 在癌肿瘤中血管出现不正常。
  • This apparatus scans patients' brains for tumours. 这台仪器扫描检查病人的脑瘤。
adj.可接受的,合意的,受欢迎的
  • The terms of the contract are acceptable to us.我们认为这个合同的条件可以接受。
  • Air pollution in the city had reached four times the acceptable levels.这座城市的空气污染程度曾高达可接受标准的四倍。
n.奇迹,令人惊奇的人或事
  • The doctors said that his recovery was a miracle. 医生们说他的复原是件奇事。
  • It is simply a miracle that rice should grow in such a place.稻子竟能在这样的地方生长,这实在是个奇迹。
学英语单词
ablation testing in turbulence pipe
anamniote
animal stalking
anthracene scintillation dosimeter
anti-pilling agent
Antrenyl
aorticopulmonary window
asbestos product factory
bod veal
boom saddle
brace position
cabbage maggot
camber cambered
career identity
Carex shangchengensis
chain gauge
charke coal
chenopods
Chinese Physical Society
clancularly
clear away
collective trademark
cream caustic soda
dibromodiphenylsilane
diphenyl oxide
down-stairs
ecrustaceous
egg-shaped clothoid
equality-restricted estimator
feathertops
fiddleists
financialisaton
fixed loop radio compass
flood-level rim
floppy disk inputoutput system
free board during maximum submersion
gelatin stab
get-tough policy
glycation
gymnotuses
heat resisting enamel
hexadecylic acid
hostesses
improportion
Keith, C.
know it in one's bones
Kubo-kawa
Kutkiol
laws of constant proportion
light aggregate
lympho-protease
malefactives
method of characteristic
miasms
microsaur
mid Pleistocene epoch
Midlum
Monitan
No sweet without sweat.
non-reciprocal device
Notar
occupational hazards
occupational health psychology
octadecanamide
Padgett's dermatome
paternalness
plain water fire extinguisher
Plantago aristata
potassium titanyl oxygenic phosphate crystal
premature eruption of deciduous tooth
presides over
pseudococcidaes
psychoda duplilamnata
purs
pyoelectricity
right of priority
robbable
route relay interlocking
Schellingian
shock symptom
sitaram
specific smell unit
Sprengel
sunflower disc
supporting mass
systemic autoimmune disease
Tatry Wysokie (Vysoké Tatry)
teachin
the gadfly
TIS8
trithiophosphite
tuming
turbine (type) agitator
Ulsterwomen
unpoise
USB phone
vehicle area network
wedge slot
wet ground mica
whisker fibre
whiteness retenion
widow-bird