有关食物热效应的叙述,正确的是() A.食入热食时出现满头大汗,故食物热效应最高点出

题型:单项选择题 A型题

问题:

有关食物热效应的叙述,正确的是()

A.食入热食时出现满头大汗,故食物热效应最高点出现在进食期间

B.食物的营养成分不同其热效应不同,糖类、脂肪、蛋白质三者中脂肪的食物热效应最高

C.进食速度快时,血液大量供应消化系统,造成中枢系统、激素和酶的分泌速度降低,因而食物热效应相对降低

D.蛋白质的食物热效应消耗本身产生能量的30%

E.混合性食物热效应一般是基础代谢的15%

考点:卫生资格考试(中初级)营养学基础知识主治医师营养学基础知识模拟试题三
题型:单项选择题 A型题

锅炉排污率

题型:单项选择题 A型题

股份有限责任设立条件包括()。

A.发起人符合法定人数

B.发起人认购和募集的股本要达到法定资本最低限额

C.制定公司章程

D.有公司名称

E.有固定的生产经营场所和必要的生产经营条件

题型:单项选择题 A型题

病历:患者,男性,43岁。因膝关节酸痛而口服阿司匹林2片/次,3次/日。1小时前恶心、呕吐,呕吐物为咖啡样,约500ml。柏油样便,量约700g。查体:脉搏120次/分,血压90/75mmHg,神志清,贫血貌。四肢湿冷,上腹压痛。

提示:本病人诊断为急性糜烂出血性胃炎失血性休克。提问:急诊胃镜的最佳时机为()

A.12小时以内

B.12~24小时内

C.24~48小时内

D.48~72小时内

E.6小时内

F.1周以后

题型:单项选择题 A型题

Right now, Prince Charles is probably wishing he had hit the slopes after all. Britain’s Prince of Wales decided last year to begin reducing his carbon footprint--the amount of carbon dioxide created by his activities--by cutting down on his flights abroad, including an annual skiing vacation in Switzerland. Though we should all be in the position to make such sacrifices, Charles didn’t win plaudits for his holiday martyrdom. Instead British green groups, seconded by Environment Secretary David Miliband, spanked the Prince for deciding to fly to the U. S. on Jan. 27 to pick up a prestigious environmental award, arguing that the carbon emissions created by his travel canceled out his green cred.
It’s too easy to mock His Royal Highness; in England it’s practically the national sport. But his critics may be onto something. Jets are uniquely polluting, and the carbon they emit at high altitudes appears to have a greater warming effect than the same amount of carbon released on the ground by cars or factories. On an individual level, a single long-haul flight can emit more carbon per passenger than months of SUV driving. Though air travel is responsible for only 1.6% of total greenhouse gas emissions, in many countries it’s the fastest-growing single source--and with annual airline passengers worldwide predicted to double to 9 billion by 2025, that growth is unlikely to abate. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) put it bluntly last year: "The growth in aviation and the need to address climate change cannot be reconciled. "
One of the biggest problems, as the IPCC points out, is that the carbon emitted by air travel currently has "no tech no fix. " As messy a source of pollution as electricity generation and ground transportation are, technologies do exist that could drastically cut carbon from power plants and cars. Not so for planes, the same aircraft models will almost certainly be flying on the same kerosene fuel for decades.
Admittedly, the airline industry has improved efficiency over the past 40 years, with technological upgrades more than doubling efficiency. There are tweaks in aircraft operations that could nip carbon emissions even further. Virgin Atlantic airlines tycoon Richard Branson, who pledged $ 3 billion in the fight against climate change, advocates having planes towed on the ground rather than taxiing, which he has said could cut a yet unspecified portion of fuel on long flights. Emissions trading for the air industry could help as well, with airlines given carbon caps and then being required to purchase credits from other industries if they exceed their limits. But there’s nothing on the horizon for aircraft with the carbon- cutting potential of hydrogen engines or solar energy. "It’s not like having leaky home windows you can fix with double glazing," says Leo Murray, a spokesman for the green group Plane Stupid, which led the criticism of Prince Charles. Nor is there any replacement for long-haul air travel itself. I can take a train from Boston to Washington, but until we can figure out how to travel via fireplace, Harry Potter-style, the only way I’m getting from Tokyo to New York City is in aircraft that may emit more than 5,200 Ibs. (about 2,400 kg) of carbon per passenger, round-trip, according to one estimate. On an individual level, you can try to make your flight carbon neutral by donating to, say, a forestry project that will soak up the greenhouse gases you have created. An increasing number of airlines and travel agents do offer such options. The London-based CarbonNeutral Company reports that requests for carbon offsetting from individual travelers have jumped over the past six months. But the still tiny number of neutralized flights can hardly compensate for the rapid increases in global air travel.
So is grounding ourselves the only answer That seems to be the conclusion of environmentalists in Britain, who also went after Prime Minister Tony Blair for a recent holiday trip to Miami. Though Blair belatedly promised to begin offsetting his leisure travel, he insisted that telling people to fly less was simply impractical--and he’s probably right. Some environmentalists suggest that we could learn to live more locally, but good luck keeping them in Brighton after they’ve seen Beijing--and vice versa. Our best bet for now may be to limit any business and leisure flights that we can and offset the rest. So when you’re pondering that luxury Swiss vacation, ask yourself: What would Prince Charles do

Which of the following would be the author’s major concern

A.Air travel is responsible for only 1.6% of total greenhouse gas emissions.

B.The carbon emission by air travel is growing faster than by other industries.

C.The annual airline passengers worldwide are predicted to double to 9 billion by 2025.

D.The carbon released by jets, cars and factories all produces a warming effect.

题型:单项选择题 A型题

母乳喂养的基本原则是按时定量。

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