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Neuroscientists now understand at least some of the physiology behind a wide range of unconscious states, from deep sleep to coma, from partially conscious conditions to a persistent vegetative state, the condition diagnosed in Ms. Schiavo. New research, by laboratories in New York and Europe, has allowed for much clearer distinctions to be made between the uncounted number of people who at some time become comatose, the 10,000 to 15,000 Americans who subsist in vegetative states and the estimated 100,000 or more who exist in states of partial consciousness. This emerging picture should make it easier for doctors to judge which brain-damaged patients have some hope of recovering awareness, experts say, and already it is providing clues to the specific brain processes that sustain conscious awareness. "Understanding what these processes are will give us a better sense of how to help the whole range of people living with brain injuries," said Dr. Nicholas Schiff, an assistant professor of neurology and neuroscience at NewYork-Presbyterian / Weill Cornell hospital. "That is where this field is ultimately headed: toward a better understanding of what consciousness is." The most familiar unconscious state is sleep, which in its deepest phases is characterized by little electrical activity in the brain and almost complete unresponsiveness. Coma, the most widely known state of impaired unconsciousness, is in fact a continuum. Doctors rate the extent to which a comatose person shows pain responses and reactions to verbal sounds on a scale from 3, for no response, to 13, for consistent responses. As in sleep, people in comas may move or make sounds and typically have no memory of either. But they almost always emerge from this state in two to three weeks, doctors say, when the eyes open spontaneously. What follows is critical for the person"s recovery. Those who are lucky, or who have less severe injuries, gradually awaken. "The first thing I remember was telling my ex-boyfriend, who was at the foot of the bed, to shut up," said Trisha Meili, who fell into a coma after being beaten and raped in 1990, and wrote about the experience in the book, I Am the Central Park Jogger. In the days after this memory, Ms. Meili said, she slipped in and out of conscious awareness, "as if my body was taking care of the most important things first, and leaving my moment to moment awareness for last." In fact, researchers say, this is precisely what happens. The primitive brain stem, which controls sleep-wake cycles as well as reflexes, asserts itself first, as the eyes open. Ideally, areas of the cerebral cortex, the seat of conscious thought, soon follow, like lights flicking on in the upper rooms of a darkened house. But in some cases — Ms. Schiavo"s was one of them — the cortical areas fail to engage, and the patient"s prognosis becomes dire. Neurologists were all but unanimous in diagnosing the condition of Ms. Schiavo, whose heart stopped temporarily in 1990, depriving her brain of oxygen. Brain cells and neural connections wither and die without oxygen, like marine life in a drained lake, leaving virtually nothing unharmed. People with these kinds of injuries—Nancy Cruzan, whose case reached the Supreme Court in 1990 is an example — almost always remain unresponsive if they have not regained awareness in the first months after the injury. In medical terms, they become persistently vegetative, a diagnosis first described in 1972 by Dr. Fred Plum of Cornell University and Dr. Bryan Jennett, a neurosurgeon at Glasgow University in Scotland. In a sense, the description of the diagnosis began the modern study of disorders of consciousness. "Before 1972 people talked about permanent comas, or irrecoverable comas, but we defined a different state altogether, with the eyes open, some reflex activity, but no sign of meaningful psychological responsiveness," Dr. Jennett, now a professor emeritus, said in an interview. In an exhaustive review of the medical histories of more than 700 persistently vegetative patients, a team of doctors in 1994 reported that about 15 percent of those who suffered brain damage from oxygen deprivation, like Ms. Schiavo, recovered some awareness within three months. After that, however, very few recovered and none did so after two years. About 52 percent of people with traumatic wounds to the head, often from car accidents, recovered some awareness in the first year after the injury, the study found; very few recovered after that. "It"s the difference between taking a blow to the brain, which affects a local area — and taking this global, whole-brain hit," said Dr. Joseph Fins, chief of the medical ethics division of NewYork-Presbyterian / Weill Cornell hospital. Yet these statistics cannot explain the stories of remarkable recovery that surfaced during the debate over Ms. Schiavo"s fate. There was Terry Wallis, a mechanic in Arkansas who regained awareness in 2003, more than 18 years after he fell into unconsciousness from a car accident; Sarah Scantlin, a Kansas woman who, also a victim of a car accident, emerged from a similar state after 19 years; and several others, whose collective human spirit seemed to defy the experts, and trump science. Researchers say these cases can be accounted for by recent studies that indicate the existence of yet another state of subdued responsiveness, one that represents a clear break from the vegetative. It is suggested in the passage that______.

A.no unconscious patients can emerge from their states
B.there exists another state of subdued responsiveness
C.all brain damages are caused by a persistent vegetative state
D.it was in 1994 when the modern study of disorders of consciousness began
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Please read the following article in Chinese carefully, and then write a summary of 200 words in English on the ANSWER SHEET. Make sure that you cover all the major points of the article. 科学家说,在第一批艾滋病例被发现以后的20年里,他们对这种病毒性疾病的了解已超过其他任何一种病毒性疾病。但是,联合国艾滋病规划署的负责人彼得皮奥和国际艾滋病学会会长罗马的斯特凡诺韦拉及其他一些专家都认为,全面考察那些尚未解决的问题,可能对艾滋病和其他疾病治疗的进展是一项有益的举措。 这些较广泛的重要科学问题包括: 为什么艾滋病使患者容易感染某些癌症和传染病 一种传统的说法是,癌细胞在人体内不断繁殖,但受到健康免疫系统的控制。艾滋病的情况却不是这样。艾滋病人很容易患非何杰金氏淋巴瘤和卡波西氏肉瘤,但不易患在美国最常见的乳腺癌、结肠癌和肺癌等。这说明,受损的免疫系统(至少是艾滋病患者的免疫系统)可以抑制普通癌细胞的发展。 艾滋病病毒侵入人体后通过什么途径摧毁免疫系统 当艾滋病病毒通过性接触传播时,病毒必须穿过组织屏障进入人体。这个过程目前尚不清楚。病毒可能直接侵入,或许由一系列不同种类的细胞带入。最终,艾滋病病毒穿过淋巴管到淋巴结和淋巴系统的其他部分。但病毒是如何摧毁人体内负责打击入侵传染体的CD一4细胞的,目前还无法确定。 艾滋病病毒是怎样破坏免疫系统的 艾滋病病毒能杀死对付自己的免疫细胞,但艾滋病病毒携带者患艾滋病的快慢却大不相同。因此科学家提出问题:免疫系统中那些使人患艾滋病时间出现差异的因素能否被识别出来如果能,它们能否用于制止艾滋病患者病情的恶化,甚至在最初就可能防止人们感染艾滋病病毒 最有效的艾滋病疗法是什么 从理论上来说,尽早治疗可以提供维护免疫功能的最佳时机。但是新药物无法彻底清除体内的艾滋病病毒,因此患者不得不终身服用这些具有危险副作用的药物,而且还可能在产生抗药性时改服别的药物。因此新的方法可能建议在免疫系统出现衰退迹象时才开始治疗。 可能研制出疫苗吗 毫无疑问,一种有效的疫苗是控制这种瘟疫的关键。但是目前只有一种疫苗进入了全面检验的阶段,而对其会有多大的保护功能,却有着很大的争议。世界各地流行的艾滋病在遗传类型上各不相同,目前还不清楚的是,从某种艾滋病病毒获得的疫苗能否防止其他类型的艾滋病。 如果没有疫苗,能否阻止艾滋病病毒的传播 如果没有深入集中的行为研究,仅靠宣传是无法阻止这种全球性瘟疫的。