单词:cancer tissue
单词:cancer tissue 相关文章
Health Report - Brain Cancer Like Kennedy's Is Difficult to Treat Senator Ted Kennedy, 76 years old, has a glioma in an area where the best way to fight it may be with radiation and chemicals. Transcript of radio broadcast: 27 May 2008 This is the V
00:05.00]5 有用的东西 [00:10.00]A What things do Mary and Peter need to lay the tables? [00:16.78]Mary和Peter要摆什么在桌子上? [00:23.56]Mary needs some knives and forks. [00:27.83]Mary要摆一些刀子和叉子。 [00:32.10]She also needs some plates. [00:3
When humans have a heart attack, heart muscles die after being cut off from their blood supply. But what if the heart could grow new muscle to replace the dead tissue? Some amphibians can regrow body parts, even entire limbs. But humans and other hig
An international team of scientists at a U.S. university is investigating whether 'cooking' cancerous tumors using tiny nanoparticles in a magnetic field might be an effective and useful treatment. Preliminary findings suggest they may be on the righ
[00:00.00]Lesson Nine.Listen. [00:17.29]What's this? It's a tissue. [00:23.35]Thanks.Susan's beautiful. [00:29.91]You're beautiufl too.Carol. [00:34.77]Some pronunciation practive.Repeat. [00:40.96]what's this what's that [00:53.81]these what're thes
Google: AI Found Breast Cancer with 99 Percent Accuracy Google says it is deeply involved in developing artificial intelligence, or AI, to help doctors identify and treat disease. The company previously announced successful tests of machine learning
Can Artificial Intelligence Make Doctors Better? Artificial intelligence (AI) technology may soon be a useful tool for doctors. It may help them better understand and treat diseases like breast cancer in ways that were never before possible. 人工智能
Little Johnny watched, fascinated, as his mother smoothedcold cream on her face. Why do you do that mommy? he asked. To make myself beautiful, said his mother, who then beganremoving the cream with a tissue. What's the matter? asked Little Johnny. Gi
SCIENCE IN THE NEWS -April 2, 2002: Cancer By Oliver Chanler VOICE ONE: This is Sarah Long. VOICE TWO: And this is Bob Doughty with Science in the News, a VOA Special English program about recent deve
HEALTH REPORT -October 30, 2002: Breast Cancer Operation Studies By Nancy Steinbach This is the VOA Special English Health Report. Two new long-term studies have compared two operations for early brea
3-D Technology Saves Lives 3D技术拯救生命 From VOA Learning English, this is the Health Report. Three-dimensional technology -- known as three-D -- gives depth to objects that would otherwise appear two-dimensional, or flat. Three-D makes movie
Scientists Regrow Tissue Killed During Heart Attack U.S. scientists have done what was once considered science fiction - regrown heart muscle to replace tissue that was killed off in a heart attack. It's the latest advance in the field of regenerativ
Researchers have identified a link between dementia and the brain damage that can occur in older people with high blood pressure and other forms of cardiovascular disease. High blood pressure, high cholesterol, and other conditions that affect blood
Beating Heart Tissue from Stem Cells In a study in the journal Science, researchers explain how they used mouse embryonic stem cells and microchip technology to create heart muscle tissue that actually beats. Cynthia Graber reports One of the goals o
HEALTH REPORT - Study Says Dogs Can Smell Cancer By Cynthia Kirk Broadcast: Wednesday, October 06, 2004 This is Gwen Outen with the VOA Special English Health Report. Dogs are known for their sense of
HEALTH REPORT - Prostate Cancer: What It Is and How Doctors Treat It By Caty Weaver Broadcast: Wednesday, March 30, 2005 I'm Gwen Outen with the VOA Special English Health Report. A listener in Vietna
Body Clock Provides Clues to Aging 生物钟提供衰老的线索 If youre searching for the fountain of youth, you might find it in your DNA. Thats according to a new study that sheds light on the biological clock ticking in our genomes, why our bod
If youre searching for the fountain of youth, you might find it in your DNA. Thats according to a new study that sheds light on the biological clock ticking in our genomes, why our bodies age and how we can slow down the process. University of Califo
BEIJING, Sept. 2 (Xinhuanet) -- Firefighters who worked in the wreckage of the World Trade Center in 2001 were 19 percent more likely to develop cancer than those who were not there, according to a study. The study, published Thursday in the British