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 TB   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 结核, 肺结核, 结核病, 结核杆菌

[计] 太字节(万亿字节)

[医] 结核菌素




    tb
    [ noun ]
    1. a metallic element of the rare earth group; used in lasers; occurs in apatite and monazite and xenotime and ytterbite

    2. <noun.substance>
    3. infection transmitted by inhalation or ingestion of tubercle bacilli and manifested in fever and small lesions (usually in the lungs but in various other parts of the body in acute stages)

    4. <noun.state>
    5. a unit of information equal to 1000 gigabits or 10^12 (1,000,000,000,000) bits

    6. <noun.quantity>
    7. a unit of information equal to 1000 gigabytes or 10^12 (1,000,000,000,000) bytes

    8. <noun.quantity>
    9. a unit of information equal to 1024 gibibytes or 2^40 (1,099,511,627,776) bytes

    10. <noun.quantity>


    1. In 1906, the bacteriologist Calmette isolated a culture of bovine TB bacteria, which he and Guarin mutated and bred in the laboratory until they had a non-virulent strain.
    2. He said the number of TB cases went up from 22,201 in 1985 to 22,768 in 1986.
    3. AIDS tests should be offered to all inmates with known TB infections, the CDC report said.
    4. Another soon-to-be published study reports the discovery of a racial difference in the way blood cells respond to the TB bacteria, which could help explain why blacks seem more prone to getting tuberculosis.
    5. The study found that 56 percent of New York inmates with TB in 1985 and 1986 also were infected with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.
    6. I couldn't even make a phone call it was so bad," Haavisto said. "I said I got to get out of this hole or I'm going to die in here." Inmate Tony DeGidio contracted TB during the epidemic.
    7. A similar connection with HIV has been observed with the increase in TB cases in other parts of the country, the authors said.
    8. TB is spread in unhealthy environments reminiscent of the poorhouses of the past.
    9. A Board of Health hearing July 20 will deal with a proposed regulation requiring all nursing homes admissions to be tested for TB as a result of the outbreak at Ruby Mountains Manor.
    10. "You accept the news of the diagnosis: TB.
    11. "Unless effective action is taken to intervene, the TB problem in correctional facilities is likely to worsen during the next decade," said researchers at the federal Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta.
    12. Tuberculosis cases increased 35 percent in Newark, N.J., in 1989 over the previous year, alarming health officials who had noted with satisfaction a slow, steady decrease in TB cases over the last few decades.
    13. Reichman noted that most American have forgotten about the problems of TB; from 1981 to 1984, TB cases declined an average of 6 percent per year according to the Centers for disease control.
    14. Reichman noted that most American have forgotten about the problems of TB; from 1981 to 1984, TB cases declined an average of 6 percent per year according to the Centers for disease control.
    15. Measles had depressed the immune system enough for dormant TB bacteria to become active. Similar immune suppression was observed in the 1960s as a side effect of potential cancer drugs.
    16. In New Jersey, inmates had a TB rate of 110 per 100,000 in 1987, 11 times higher than the general New Jersey population.
    17. In New York there were 106 TB cases per 100,000 inmates in 1986 _ seven times more than the average of 15 cases reported in 1976-78.
    18. Once a worldwide scourge, TB is now relatively rare in industrialized countries and easily treatable with antibiotics.
    19. Health experts link the rise in TB to AIDS because people with HIV, the AIDS-related virus, are more susceptible to tuberculosis.
    20. Robert M. Levy, a senior attorney with the New York Civil Liberties Union who represents a patient with TB, said he is negotiating with Mr. Bogard a possible change in the procedure.
    21. Funding to fight TB was cut in recent years in many areas, on the assumption the disease was no longer a problem.
    22. I would tell you, quite frankly, that time did not wear heavily at all." Burgeni said many people who survived TB were strengthened emotionally.
    23. The CDC recommended these corrective measures for prisons: TB tests at least once a year, quick X-rays for inmates showing symptoms and isolation of those infected.
    24. Another soon-to-be published study reports the discovery of a racial difference in the way blood cells respond to the TB bacteria, which could help explain why blacks seem to be more prone to tuberculosis.
    25. A Florida study found that 10 percent of AIDS patients were also TB patients; a study at a New Jersey hospital found a connection in 21 percent, the CDC said.
    26. Kenneth Ho, 67, of Syracuse, N.Y., said doctors tricked him and other patients when lung X-rays revealed his TB infection in late 1948.
    27. When they were retested at least two months later, 14 percent of the blacks and 7 percent of the whites showed evidence of TB infections.
    28. But unlike AIDS, TB is highly contagious and can be spread by airborne particles coughed up by a person with untreated, clinically active pulmonary TB.
    29. But unlike AIDS, TB is highly contagious and can be spread by airborne particles coughed up by a person with untreated, clinically active pulmonary TB.
    30. The Conklins were among about 100 people at a reunion last month of former TB patients who took the open-air "cure" in the Adirondack Mountains of upstate New York.
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