托福考试阅读辅导:托业阅读模拟文(四)

文章作者 100test 发表时间 2007:03:10 10:49:49
来源 100Test.Com百考试题网


Formerly conjoined twins doing well
  One year after a neurosurgeon separated them by cutting through a section of brain, Carl Aguirre says "Wow!" as he whizzes a toy truck off the tray of his high chair and his brother Clarence holds his nose to let his mother know his diaper is dirty.
  After "starting their life over," the formerly conjoined 3-year-old Filipino boys have been amazingly free of significant complications, doctors say. Clarence is about to take his first steps and therapists say Carl will soon follow.
  "When they emerged from the OR as separate boys, it was almost as if that was their second birth," said Dr. Robert Marion, the boys pediatrician. "Their motor skills are what youd expect of a 1-year-old. Theyre starting to walk. Theyre playing appropriately in the way that a 1-year-old would. Their speech, also, is like that of a 1-year-old."
  Until last Aug. 4, when they underwent the fourth in a series of major operations at the Childrens Hospital at Montefiore Medical Center in the Bronx, Carl and Clarence had been unable to sit up, stand straight or see each others face. Joined at the top of their heads, they were limited to lying on their backs, which stunted their development and subjected them to chronic pneumonia caused by inhaling food.
  "They were going to die," Marion said. "And now seeing them with unlimited potential, its the most gratifying experience Ive ever had in medicine."
  The boys and their mother, Arlene, came to New York in 2003, when Montefiore agreed to take the boys case for free — it has cost more than $3 million so far — and the Blythedale Childrens Hospital in Valhalla agreed to donate housing and therapy.
  The Childrens Hospital team of neurosurgeon Dr. James Goodrich and plastic surgeon Dr. David Staffenberg separated the boys in a gradual "staged" approach, pushing apart their brains and dividing the blood vessels in four operations from October 2003 to August 2004. In between, the boys were given time to heal. It was a departure from the more common single marathon operation.
  During the final operation, the surgeons found that the boys brains, which scans had indicated were abutting but separate, were actually shared and seamless at one point. Dreading whatever complications he might cause, Goodrich studied and consulted and finally found a place to cut where veins seemed to go in opposite directions.

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