Parkinson’s disease, first described in the early 1800s by British physician James Parkinson as "shaking palsy", is among the mo

admin2018-03-26  22

问题    Parkinson’s disease, first described in the early 1800s by British physician James Parkinson as "shaking palsy", is among the most prevalent neurological disorders. According to the United Nations, at least four million people worldwide have it; in North America, estimates run from 500, 000 to one million, with about 50, 000 diagnosed every year. These figures are expected to double by 2040 as the world’s elderly population grows; indeed, Parkinson’s and other neurodegenerative illnesses common in the elderly (such as Alzheimer’s and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis) are on their way to overtaking cancer as a leading cause of death. But the disease is not entirely one of the aged: 50 percent of patients acquire it after age 60; the other half are affected before then. Furthermore, better diagnosis has made experts increasingly aware that the disorder can attack those younger than 40.
   So far researchers and clinicians have found no way to slow, stop or prevent Parkinson’s. Although treatments do exist — including drugs and deep-brain stimulation — these therapies alleviate symptoms, not causes. In recent years, however, several promising developments have occurred. In particular, investigators who study the role proteins play have linked miscreant proteins to genetic underpinnings of the disease. Such findings are feeding optimism that fresh angles of attack can be identified.
   As its 19th-century name suggests — and as many people know from the educational efforts of prominent Parkinson’s sufferers such as Janet Reno, Muhammad Ali and Michael J. Fox — the disease is characterized by movement disorders. Tremor in the hands, arms and elsewhere, limb rigidity, slowness of movement, and impaired balance and coordination are among the disease’s hallmarks.
   In addition, some patients have trouble walking, talking, sleeping, urinating and performing sexually.
   These impairments result from neurons dying. Although the victim cells are many and found throughout the brain, those producing the neurotransmitter dopamine in a region called the substantia nigra are particularly hard-hit. These dopaminergic nerve cells are key components of the basal ganglia, a complex circuit deep within the brain that fine-tunes and co-ordinates movement. Initially the brain can function normally as it loses dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra, even though it cannot replace the dead cells. But when half or more of these specialized cells disappear, the brain can no longer cover for them. The deficit then produces the same effect that losing air traffic control does at a major airport. Delays, false starts, cancellations and, ultimately, chaos pervade as parts of the brain involved in motor control — the thalamus, basal ganglia and cerebral cortex — no longer function as an integrated and orchestrated unit.
According to the passage, what causes Parkinson’s disease?

选项 A、The dopaminergic nerve cells are impaired by the victim cells.
B、The dopaminergic nerve cells can no longer coordinate movement.
C、There are tumors in the brain.
D、There are not enough dopaminergic neurons in the brain.

答案D

解析 细节题。从文章最后一段可知,随着黑质(substantia nigra)中多巴胺能神经元(dopaminergicneuron)减少到一半以上时,大脑便不能正常工作了,因此本题正确答案为D。
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/pWxDFFFM
0

最新回复(0)