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SCIENCE IN THE NEWS - September 24, 2002: Importance of Exercise for Women / Progress for Injured
Actor Christopher Reeve / Tree Disease in California
VOICE ONE:
This is Bob Doughty1.
VOICE TWO:
And this is Steve Ember with Science in the News, a VOA Special English program about recent developments
in science. Today, we tell about a famous actor who is making progress in recovering from a severe injury. We
tell about the importance of exercise for women. And we tell about a disease affecting trees in California.
((THEME)
)
VOICE ONE:
American actor Christopher Reeve is making progress in his recovery from spinal2
cord injuries suffered seven years ago. Reeve has regained3 some movement and
physical sensation4 in his hands and feet. He is able to feel a person’s touch over
most of his body. He also can tell the difference between hot and cold.
Spinal cord injury experts say his partial improvement is a result of progress in
treatment for severe back injuries. Yet they warned other patients not to expect too
much.
Christopher Reeve is best known for acting5 as “Superman” in
four movies. He now heads the Christopher Reeve Paralysis6
Foundation, a non-profit group. It reports that about eleven-thousand Americans suffer spinal
cord injuries each year. These injuries may cause people to become paralyzed7. They may not
be able to walk, move their arms, or control other body parts.
VOICE TWO:
Christopher Reeve was injured in a horse riding accident in nineteen-ninety-five. He was
thrown from a horse that was jumping over a large object. Reeve landed on his head and
suffered broken bones in his neck. At the time of the accident, Reeve had no sensation and could not move his
body from the neck down. His doctors said that he would never be able to feel or move below his head. He
remained in this condition for more than four years.
In nineteen-ninety-nine, Reeve began to take part in an experimental treatment at the Washington University
School of Medicine in Saint8 Louis, Missouri. His treatment includes a combination of activities to restart
Reeve’s movement skills. He exercises at least three times a week on a special bicycle. His legs are connected
to wires from a computer. The computer sends electrical messages to make his leg muscles move up and down.
In other treatments, electrical messages are sent to the nerves that control other muscles in his body. Reeve also
exercises in water. And he takes drugs designed to keep his bones strong. Reeve spends about five-hundredthousand dollars a year for medical costs.
VOICE ONE:
This month, the Christopher Reeve Paralysis Foundation released a statement about his condition. A
spokeswoman said Reeve can feel the sense of touch on most of his body. She said he has regained the ability to
make small movements with his fingers, wrist, elbows, hips9 and knees. However, he has little or no balance
control for sitting, standing10 or walking.
The statement said Reeve still needs a machine to breathe most of the time. However, he can breathe for more
than one hour without the machine.
John McDonald is the director of the Spinal Cord Injury Program at Washington University. Doctor McDonald
says Reeve has made great progress. He said he has never seen a case where someone recovered this much so
many years after a severe injury.
VOICE TWO:
Christopher Reeve will be fifty years old on Wednesday. He had said that he hoped to walk before his fiftieth
birthday. Reeve now says, “Even if your body does not work the way it used to, the heart and the mind and the
spirit are not decreased. It is as simple as that.
”
Christopher Reeve can now feel when his wife and children put their arms around him. He told People magazine
that "To be able to feel just the lightest touch is really a gift.
”
((MUSIC BRIDGE))
VOICE ONE:
A new study says walking is just as effective as more difficult exercise in reducing
the risk of heart disease or stroke in women. It suggests that even small amounts of
exercise can be good for women’s health. Federal researchers in the United States
carried out the study. The research is part of the federal government’s Women’s
Health Initiative11. Researchers are studying many health questions important to older
women.
The researchers observed almost seventy-four-thousand women during a six-year
period. The women were between the ages of fifty and seventy-nine. They answered
questions about their activity levels. The researchers divided the women into five
groups, from the least active to the most active.
VOICE TWO:
The study found that fast walking for about two-and-one-half hours a week cut the risk of heart disease or stroke
by one-third. This good effect was about the same in women who spent an equal amount of time doing more
difficult exercise. The good effects increased as the women spent more time and energy taking part in such
exercises. Women who spent even a small amount of time walking reduced their risk of heart disease or stroke by
about nine percent.
The study also found that sitting in a chair for at least sixteen hours each day could increase the risk of heart
disease and stroke whether a person exercised or not. The results were published in the New England Journal of
Medicine.
VOICE ONE:
A second unrelated study in the same journal showed that girls become less active as they get older. The study
found that a majority of American girls get almost no daily exercise by the time they are eighteen years old. The
study was part of a federal effort to find out why more black women than white women are overweight. Sue12
Kimm of the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine in Pennsylvania led the study.
The researchers gathered information from about two-thousand-five-hundred girls during a nine-year period.
More than half the girls were black. The other girls were white. The girls were about nine years old when the
study began.
The girls answered a series of questions throughout the study about their diets and activity. The researchers
recorded after-school exercise such as sports, bicycle riding, dancing and swimming.
By the time they were sixteen years old, more than half of the black girls and almost one-third of the white girls
said they did not exercise outside of school. The study confirms other research that shows many American
children, especially teenagers, are inactive. Researchers say this could help to explain why increasing numbers of
American young adults are overweight.
((MUSIC BRIDGE)
)
VOICE TWO:
Scientists in California say two kinds of trees important to the state’s economy are infected
with a fast-spreading disease. The scientists found the infection on coast redwood and
Douglas fir trees in two areas in northern California.
The disease is known as sudden oak13 death syndrome14. It has killed tens of thousands of oak
trees since its discovery in northern California seven years ago. No cure has been found.
Recent tests by the scientists confirmed the presence of Phytophthora ramorum (fy-TOFFthor-uh rah-MOR-um), an organism that causes sudden oak death syndrome. They found the
organism in young trees that had shown signs of infection.
(Photo - National
Park Service) Matteo Garbelotto (mah-TAY-oh gar-beh-LOT-oh) of the University of California at
Berkeley was one of the scientists. He says he was surprised to find the infection in young redwoods in all the
places his team tested. He said the infected Douglas fir trees were found in only one place. But he said they
seemed to show a stronger reaction to infection.
VOICE ONE:
Redwood and Douglas fir trees are important to California’s environment and economy. The state’s redwood
trees are world famous. They can grow to be more than one-hundred meters high. Some redwoods live to be two-
thousand years old. Douglas fir trees are harvested for their wood and to be used as Christmas trees in people’s
homes. These harvests are worth more than one-thousand-million dollars each year in the United States.
Federal rules ban transport of infected plants or their products across state borders. There also are restrictions16 on
the covering, or bark, of infected trees. Small pieces of bark are used to cover soil.
The scientists say it may be years before they know how seriously the disease will affect California’s Douglas
fir and redwood forests.
((THEME))
VOICE TWO:
This SCIENCE IN THE NEWS program was written by George Grow and Cynthia Kirk. It was produced by
George Grow. This is Steve Ember.
VOICE ONE:
And this is Bob Doughty. Join us again next week for more news about science in Special English on the Voice
of America.
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1 doughty | |
adj.勇猛的,坚强的 | |
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2 spinal | |
adj.针的,尖刺的,尖刺状突起的;adj.脊骨的,脊髓的 | |
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3 regained | |
复得( regain的过去式和过去分词 ); 赢回; 重回; 复至某地 | |
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4 sensation | |
n.感觉,感知力,激动,轰动 | |
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5 acting | |
n.演戏,行为,假装;adj.代理的,临时的,演出用的 | |
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6 paralysis | |
n.麻痹(症);瘫痪(症) | |
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7 paralyzed | |
adj.瘫痪的 | |
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8 saint | |
n.圣徒;基督教徒;vt.成为圣徒,把...视为圣徒 | |
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9 hips | |
abbr.high impact polystyrene 高冲击强度聚苯乙烯,耐冲性聚苯乙烯n.臀部( hip的名词复数 );[建筑学]屋脊;臀围(尺寸);臀部…的 | |
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10 standing | |
n.持续,地位;adj.永久的,不动的,直立的,不流动的 | |
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11 initiative | |
n.主动性,首创精神,主动权(的行动),倡议 | |
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12 sue | |
vt.控告,起诉;vi.请求,追求,起诉 | |
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13 oak | |
n.栎树,橡树,栎木,橡木 | |
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14 syndrome | |
n.综合病症;并存特性 | |
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15 coastal | |
adj.海岸的,沿海的,沿岸的 | |
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16 restrictions | |
约束( restriction的名词复数 ); 管制; 制约因素; 带限制性的条件(或规则) | |
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