单词 | Polio |
例句 | 1. Children have been routinely immunized against polio since 1958. 2. The polio vaccine has saved millions of lives. 3. Polio was then endemic among children my age. 4. He was crippled by polio as a child. 5. She was struck down by polio at the age of four. 6. As a child she contracted polio and was crippled for life. 7. My children have been inoculated against polio. 8. Polio has been virtually eradicated in Brazil. 9. Children are routinely immunized against polio. 10. Have you been vaccinated against polio? 11. The first authoritative study of polio was published in 1840. 12. He was struck down by polio when he was a teenager. 13. Although disabled by polio during the Second World War, Proctor was also a first-rate helmsman. 14. She had polio as a child and spent the rest of her life in a wheelchair. 15. Gladys was crippled by polio at the age of 3. 16. My grandmother was fifty-two when Virginia contracted polio. 17. It took decades to develop a vaccine for polio. 18. By the close of 1955 polio began to decline. 19. What had happened in medicine since the polio vaccine? 20. Some camps closed because children came down with polio. 21. One hundred more polio patients soon followed. 22. The following year he contracted polio. 23. Some families of polio victims mounted twenty-four-hour bedside vigils. 24. Do they think it could be polio? 25. First, how many types of polio virus existed? 26. Doctors told her she'd contracted polio from her son. 27. Care for polio patients was costly. 27. try its best to collect and make good sentences. 28. If there was any pain, polio was suspected. 29. He is paralysed down his left side as a result of polio. 30. Now 95 per cent of UK babies are immunised against diphtheria, tetanus, polio, measles, mumps and rubella before they are a year old. 1. Children have been routinely immunized against polio since 1958. 2. The polio vaccine has saved millions of lives. 3. Polio was then endemic among children my age. 4. He was crippled by polio as a child. 5. She was struck down by polio at the age of four. 6. As a child she contracted polio and was crippled for life. 31. Polio was a crack in the fantasy. 32. The isolation ward was already crowded with cases of other illnesses when the first five polio victims arrived in May. 33. The vaccine brought a drastic drop-80 percent-in paralytic polio cases by 1957. 34. Like others beset by misfortune, polio patients found solace in comparing themselves to others. 35. She had survived polio, but her right leg was weak and deformed. 36. Polio, apparently passed on from a human epidemic in the region, had already reduced their numbers. 37. At one time, and I became adversaries over the selection of polio virus strains to be used as oral vaccines. 38. Writing about her friend Bea Wright, biographer Eleanor Chappell voiced the spirit expected of polio victims. 39. When Sabin developed his attenuated strains of polio he energetically pursued his goal of making them widely accepted as vaccine strains. 40. The decision had taken so long and polio had so retreated from public concern that it was all anticlimactic. 41. For polio patients, however, something more than inactivity was involved in the loss of calcium. 42. Everything was coming true, then right out of high school I contracted polio and was completely paralyzed within a week. 43. But, undoubtedly,'s major achievements were in the field of vaccination against polio. 44. To dread the slightest sneeze or cough that might herald the onset of polio or tuberculosis. 45. Polio patients in acute wards were seldom shielded from the deaths of others. 46. In 1924 a friend told him that another polio victim had received helpful therapy from warm mineral water in the South. 47. In 1940, he was stricken with polio and became disabled. 48. In polio epidemics, rewards and punishments were dispensed with a random, devastating hand. 49. The iron lung became an icon of the polio years. 50. Money solved that problem, as it was to solve many others to come in the crusade against polio. 51. As a child she had suffered from a mild case of polio(), which left one leg slightly shorter than the other. 52. When she contracted polio, which paralyzed her left leg, she was told she would never walk again. 53. Raised in London, he suffered polio in childhood and endured long spells in hospital. 54. When a hospital worker came down with polio, the whole staff was inoculated. 55. That's enough to provide 100 antibiotic tablets to fight infections and sufficient vaccine to protect four children from polio for life. 56. Diseases such as leprosy and polio have almost completely died out. 57. Not suspecting polio, physicians prescribed codeine, penicillin, aspirin, and even antibiotics for their patients' aching bodies. 58. Often the first separation was literal, through hospital isolation and quarantine, practices firmly established during the 1916 polio epidemic. 59. A teen club used the money from its treasury to take a teen polio patient to a movie. 60. Victims and their families spent months, even years, in doubt about what long-term effects polio might have. 61. Hospitals equipped to care for polio victims sometimes employed engineers around the clock to keep the respirators operating. 62. What the experimenters did not account for in their preparations was the hysteria that surrounded polio epidemics. 63. Cutter Laboratories announced a special program to provide polio vaccine to all its workers and stockholders. 64. All except one, who hobbled after them, hampered by the club foot that is the hallmark of polio. 65. Learning how few people actually had paralytic polio offered no comfort to me. 66. The author did not specifically address polio, but clearly his ideas apply. 67. The implicit threat of disease curtailed summer pleasures for the children of the polio years. 68. For all the worries a family singled out by polio might have, financial concerns seldom topped the list. 69. His interest in polio is said to have originated during the polio epidemic in New York City in 1931. 70. Maine, with a population of one million, had 463 polio cases and only 10 deaths. 71. Almost daily the disease made the news, but never had they dreamed that polio would find our family. 72. Scientists were further hampered by the fact that no one knew the true incidence of polio, because most cases were inapparent. 73. Parents of other children who had had polio told them to expect this emotional disturbance to last as long as six months. 74. For example, mandatory polio immunization of all school children has been upheld, despite the religious objections of some parents. 75. The result: a temporary reduction of flies, but no halt in the polio epidemic. 76. He immediately ordered a spinal tap that confirmed polio, and she was moved to the floor for contagious diseases. 77. The development of polio vaccines, present and future, is a monument to several important things. 78. A child under ten had only three chances in a thousand of becoming the victim of a severe attack of polio. 79. It compared 1949 epidemics in Maine and Arkansas, two states hit hard that year by polio. 80. Sweet as the victory over polio was, one medical historian wrote: It left a slightly bitter taste in many mouths. 81. Wheelchair-bound since childhood because of a crippling bout with polio, Pomus died in 1991. 82. A former polio victim walked across the state of Idaho to collect pledges. 83. Between 1948 and 1955 there were more polio cases than in the previous thirty years. 84. She was a polio victim and only four feet nine inches tall, with curvature of the spine. 85. Why call physicians courageous simply because they permit Sister Kenny to demonstrate her method of polio aftercare? 86. Read in studio A pressure group's calling for a compensation scheme for people who contract polio from vaccinations. 87. The only other animal susceptible to polio is the monkey. 87. is a online sentence dictionary, on which you can find nice sentences for a large number of words. 88. Any serious misfortune can leave a victim searching for answers and explanations, but polio was peculiarly unyielding to accountability. 89. With the vaccine approved and becoming more widely available, the unvaccinated continued to come down with polio. 90. In late August, three months into her stay, an eighteen-year old Phoenix girl was admitted with bulbar polio. 91. Today, like many other public hospitals that once took polio patients, it houses many AIDS patients. 92. If the patient had polio, the fluid showed cellular and chemical changes consistent enough for physicians to diagnose the disease. 93. If people will use the vaccine available, it is possible to give paralytic polio a knockout blow within the next year. 94. It accounted for a third of all oral polio vaccine administered. 95. Individually, too, children on polio wards sometimes received considerable special attention, which could make their stays pleasurable. 96. On staff were nurses and doctors with special training in the care of polio patients. 97. Two different live polio vaccines tested then infected children with the disease rather than protected them; some died. 98. Doctors recommend that all children be immunized against polio and tuberculosis. 99. So it can not be ruled out that this man had contracted his HIV from polio vaccine a few weeks before. 100. No one knew then nor knows now why polio erupted in the summertime, though clearly it did. 101. In a few minutes I will report on a new polio vaccine announced as a polio cure. 102. He had developed a vaccine using virulent forms of polio that were then killed with formaldehyde and injected. 103. Still, children-and adults-got polio. 104. The couple were coping as best they could with the radically altered life polio had foisted upon them. 105. Polio created an epidemic of fear unlike any other in modern times. 106. Later that day she was hospitalized in a delirium brought on by polio. 107. Bubonic plague, typhoid, polio, diphtheria, tuberculosis, syphilis and gonorrhea still afflict much of the world. 108. The conscious, alert patient, such as the polio victim, must be given treatment for as long as he desires. 109. Like all good conspiracy theories, the polio vaccine theory's originators are its worst enemies. 110. The polio patient's equal right to self-determination should not be denied merely because he is helpless. 111. When his son Matthew was temporarily crippled with polio, Guinness took to dropping in to church and praying. 112. Had anyone else in the Mott family come down with polio as a result? 113. Then came that great morning when the newly made electron microscope had been used on polio slides. 114. He maintained this gift even after he had been disabled by the recurrence of teenage polio. 115. First, chimpanzee kidney tissues will prove to have been used to grow Chat polio vaccine. 116. If flies could be eliminated, then perhaps so could polio epidemics. 117. All that attention to bladders and bowels, however necessary, only added to the lack of privacy for paralyzed polio patients. 118. As the years went on and no better idea about how one got polio was advanced, the theory took on importance. 119. The ongoing problem with the live-virus vaccine, however, is that it carries a small but predictable risk of paralytic polio. 120. Approximately 2 to 5 percent of children and up to 30 percent of adults with paralytic polio die. 121. She may have elbowed in ahead of other deserving souls, but then neither of her children got polio. 122. By the late thirties scientists knew polio was an acute viral disease that attacked the nervous system. 123. But the dream came to an abrupt end when Peter Mott came down with polio. 124. Human Aids dates from the same years during which live polio vaccines were tested. 125. In the years after the first outbreak in the United States, polio was given little attention. 126. Given the 163 extensive publicity, few could fail to be moved by the plight of polio victims. 127. So, a polio vaccine tricks our body into making antibodies to the polio virus. 128. Health Protection recommended against malaria, cholera, typhoid, polio, tetanus, hepatitis. 129. When I got polio, it was in the mid-1940s, ten years before the first polio vaccine began to be used. 130. A polio vaccine is recommended before travelling to high-risk areas. 131. The difference between what a complicated case of polio could cost and the amount a small county could raise could be staggering. 132. She had survived polio, but her right leg was weak and deformed, and her right arm dangled loosely. 133. Trade embargoes, lifted now, prevented children from getting immunizations, and many are left with the scars of polio. 134. Although the Sabin type does include a risk of inflicting paralytic polio, it also provides a more lasting immunity. 135. The Hoover family, like mine, had a past darkened with polio. 136. Voice over Children have been routinely immunised against polio since 1958 when the vaccine was introduced. 137. A lawyer whose son was hospitalized with bulbar polio worked in the hospital kitchen scrubbing the floors. 138. He retired early in 1981 so he could nurse his wife Ruby, who was partially paralyzed with polio. 139. The polio virus first invades the intestines, where it lives, replicates, and usually establishes harmless infection. 140. In the early forties researchers reasserted an earlier observation that children who had had recent tonsillectomies were prone to contracting polio. 141. Global polio eradication is the common goal of mankind. 142. At least three nationwide vaccination campaigns are expected, using monovalent oral polio vaccine and targeting the entire population. 143. The power and advantages of monovalent polio vaccines can now be fully used. 144. The scale-up comes in the wake of a challenging year for the region, in which the number of African children stricken by polio doubled to 1037 (85% of the global total). 145. Sure, there have been scientists with Professor McAfee's attitude — Jonas Salk was asked who owned the patent to the polio vaccine and scoffed: "Could you patent the sun?" 146. Travellers who have in the past received three or more doses of OPV should be offered another dose of polio vaccine before departure. 147. How can districts assist with Polio eradication during national immunization campaigns? 148. To maximise the impact of the campaigns, some of the countries will be using the recently-developed monovalent oral polio vaccine type 1 (mOPV1). 149. On 25 July 2007, four new cases of polio were confirmed in Equateur province of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, bringing the total number of cases in the country this year to 26. 150. As stated in the Board's second report, which has just been released, "Our view of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative remains: polio eradiation is feasible and vital." 151. Polio eradication can be a potent arrow head for transforming routine immunization and primary health care systems. 152. On 8 March, polio was confirmed in a nine year-old girl from Chandpur district of Chittagong division who became paralyzed on 23 January. 153. Travelers to Chad who have in the past received three or more doses of OPV should be offered another dose of polio vaccine before departure. 154. Adu, who is also a member of the Nigerian government's polio eradication committee's expert review, said researchers were preparing vaccine alternatives to combat the outbreak. 155. The polio eradication partnership is urgently scaling-up both technical and financial assistance to the Indonesia authorities. 156. One ad message being used in both countries highlights Rotary's polio - eradication efforts. 157. Several years ago, when I was writing a book about the polio vaccine, I had the opportunity to spend months wading through the personal papers of Jonas Salk. 158. Ethiopian girls hold up fingers marked with ink to show they have been immunized against polio. 159. Wallace is mid - way through a six - month, 2,658 - mile - walk to raise US $ 1 million for polio eradication. 160. Only then we can globalize the spirit of Jonas Salk, the great scientist who invented the polio vaccine, but refused to patent it, saying simply: "It would be like patenting the sun." 161. The beauty of the bivalent vaccine is that it's able to attack both types of wild polio virus in one dose. 162. As a child she suffered measles, mumps, scarlet fever, chicken pox, double pneumonia and eventually polio, leaving her left leg and foot weak and deformed. 163. Travelers who have in the past received three or more doses of OPV should be offered another dose of polio vaccine before departure. 164. The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia last month issued polio vaccination requirements for travellers to the Hajj. 165. A second polio vaccine—this one in the form of liquid drops that children swallow instead of an injection in the arm— was invented by Dr. Albert Sabin and licensed in 1963. 166. He dragged a foot when he walked, a leftover from polio. 167. In 1988, the forty-first World Health Assembly, consisting then of delegates from 166 Member States, adopted a resolution for the worldwide eradication of polio. 168. This is also thanks to an extraordinary scientific effort: the rapid development of two new polio vaccines that are now available for use by all countries. 169. Paul Offit, the man that all the pro-vax people hold up as the expert, says that Bill Gate's campaign is causing polio. 170. Berkovitz had contracted polio after ingesting a vaccine disseminated under federal supervision. 171. Tajikistan's last case of clinically confirmed polio was in 1997; the last case of polio confirmed by virological testing was in 1991. 172. A: A vaccine-derived poliovirus (VDPV) is a rare strain of poliovirus, genetically mutated from the strain contained in oral polio vaccine (OPV). 173. The Ministry of Health of the Republic of Tajikistan has since 1 January 2010 reported 430 cases of polio following the importation of a wild poliovirus type 1 into the country. 174. Pigman said that while the number of polio cases worldwide had plummeted 99 percent since 1988, "the last 1 percent reduction is the most expensive." 175. The Salk Vaccine greatly reduces the number of polio cases. 176. That was when polio struck me, shriveling me below my diaphragm in such a way that my view of my lower body had been blocked by my chest. 177. Diseases like multiple sclerosis, muscular dystrophy or polio can leave people disabled. 178. Poliomyelitis ( or polio or infantile paralysis ) : Acute infectious viral disease that can cause flaccid paralysis of muscles. 179. Travellers from Pakistan should have a full course of vaccination against polio before leaving Pakistan, with a minimum one dose of OPV before departure. 180. Between 30 May and 2 June, these vaccinators will go house-to-house to administer polio vaccine to all children under 5 years of age across Yemen. 181. The first polio vaccine was developed by Jonas Salk and tested in 1952. 182. In 1978, the immunization program began in the country generally, only BCG, polio, measles, DPT vaccine 4 was included in the scope of immunity. 183. Polio patients are learning to breathe through the glossopharyngeal method of taking breaths. 184. Roosevelt became assistant secretary of the navy at 31 but eight years later was struck by polio. 185. The private service agency decided in 1985 to make polio immunization an organizational priority. 186. In 2003 and 2004 Nigeria was gripped by rumours that polio vaccine would sterilise children and infect them with HIV. 187. There had been no cases of polio in Kenya for 21 years until a new case was detected among Somalian refugees in northeastern Kenya two years ago. 188. A: Oral polio vaccine (OPV) contains a weakened version of poliovirus, activating an immune response in the body. 189. Travelers from Chad should have a full course of vaccination against polio before leaving Chad, with a minimum one dose of OPV before departure. 190. From 2003 ? 2004, Nigerian authorities suspended the polio programme, after the vaccine was denounced by religious leaders. 191. Dr. Jonas Salk worked years to find a way to protect children from the dread disease of polio. 192. I continue to be isolated, partly because of my polio, which forces me to spend five or six days a week in an iron lung, and partly because of my personality. 193. Poliomyelitis (or polio or infantile paralysis):acute infectious viral disease that can cause flaccid paralysis of muscles. 194. The campaign is also involved in efforts to vaccinate African children against measles and polio. 195. Monovalent oral polio vaccines (OPV) – targeted at poliovirus types 1 or 3 – appear to work faster than traditional trivalent OPV to build immunity against these specific polio types. 196. The success in Niger and Egypt is the result of intense efforts in 2004-05 to halt Africa's polio epidemic and fast-track the introduction of monovalent polio vaccines into selected areas. 197. Jonas Salk, who developed the first vaccine to halt the crippling rampage of polio, dies in La Jolla, California. 198. These are the first cases of P3 viral polio in five years in the Indian capital. 199. Together we are implementing a new strategy to get polio vaccination to all the unreached children. 200. This week brought the 115th confirmed case of polio, a crippling and at times fatal disease passed on virally, mainly through bad hygiene. 201. When Dorothea Lange was seven years old, she contracted polio, a disease that caused her to walk with a limp. 202. Every Rotarian's participation is needed to ensure success in eradicating polio. 203. Type 1 polio, the most dangerous strain, is beginning to loosen its grip on the world's most tenacious reservoir, in western regions of Uttar Pradesh. 204. Globally, polio surveillance is at historical highs, as represented by the timely detection of cases of acute flaccid paralysis. 205. The polio cases in this region have become few and far between. 206. Sixty-nine children in Nigeria have been partially paralysed after weakened viruses from polio vaccines were inadvertently transmitted to people in unvaccinated regions in the north of the country. 207. The Government is planning an immunization response consisting of three National Immunization Days (NIDs), using monovalent oral polio vaccine type 1 (mOPV1). 207. is a sentence dictionary, on which you can find nice sentences for a large number of words. 208. This campaign may include delivery of messages to communities during the nationwide house-to-house polio immunization campaign beginning on Saturday. 209. Throughout school I remember the polio scares that closed down pools and rec centers for children. 210. We now have a full toolbox of vaccines, having developed and fast-tracked the introduction of monovalent and bivalent oral polio vaccines. |
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