首页
登录
职称英语
Shelly’s snack shop was the name that Brian Egemo of Badger, Iowa, applied t
Shelly’s snack shop was the name that Brian Egemo of Badger, Iowa, applied t
游客
2024-11-04
3
管理
问题
Shelly’s snack shop was the name that Brian Egemo of Badger, Iowa, applied to his wife’s side of the bed. In 1994 Shelly, who had been a sleepwalker as a child, began sleepwalking again. But this time, her nightly rambles took her to the kitchen for cookies, candies and potato chips, which she would bring back to bed and devour while still asleep. "In the morning, there would be frosting in my hair and M&M’s stuck to my husband’s back," she says. Worse yet, she woke up feeling exhausted and sick from all the junk food. After years of this "sleep eating," her nerves were so jangled that she became unglued at the slightest upset. "Someone would knock over the salt shaker and I’d go into orbit," she says. It wasn’t until 2001 that Egemo, now 37, found a doctor who could tell her what her problem was and how to treat it.
Egemo’s condition is called sleep-related eating disorder (SRFD), and it’s one of two night eating problems that doctors are just beginning to take seriously. The other is night eating syndrome (NES), in which patients wake multiple times during the night and are unable to fall asleep again unless they eat something. Although the two differ in some important ways—most notably, whether the person is conscious or not—they share many similarities. Both are hybrids of sleep and eating disorders. And both take over the lives of patients, destroying good nutrition, instilling deep shame and often causing depression and weight gain. According to psychiatrist John Winkelman of Harvard Medical School, the two conditions may affect 1 percent of the population—nearly 3 million Americans. "People who suffer from this think they’re alone," says Dr. Albert Stunkard of the University of Pennsylvania Weight and Eating Disorders Program, who identified both NES and binge eating in the 1950s. "They need to know that it’s a real disorder and there are treatments." With psychologist Kelly Allison, Stunkard has written a book called "Overcoming Night Eating Syndrome," due out in early May.
The consequences of night eating disorders are profound. In addition to sabotaging good-quality sleep, both conditions can seriously undermine attempts to maintain a well-balanced diet. People with SRED occasionally try to eat such bizarre concoctions as buttered cigarettes or smoothies of egg shells, coffee grounds and soda. But the real problem is that in the middle of the night, no one gets up and fixes healthful salads, fish or vegetables. Instead, people reach for food that’s ready to eat—most often, junk food. "It sets up a vicious cycle, where they feel bloated so they don’t want to eat during the day," says Dr. Carlos Schenck of the Minnesota Regional Sleep Disorders Center, who identified SRED in 1993. Not surprisingly, night eating often contributes to weight gain. Stunkard has found NES in 6 to 7 percent of people in weight-loss programs and up to 28 percent of those seeking gastric -bypass surgery.
Frustrated patients say their behavior seems totally beyond their control. "I wasn’t even hungry," says pediatrician Edward Rosof, 58, of Cherry Hill, N.J., who suffered from NES for 35 years. "It was a craving, like being an alcoholic. Every night I promised myself it was the last time." But even when he tried to resist the impulse, he’d lose the battle after 10 or 15 minutes because he feared that he wouldn’t get back to sleep. Other desperate patients have asked spouses to put locks on the refrigerator or even lock the bedroom door at night.
At last, new treatments are helping them unlock those doors. In a pilot study, Stunkard and psychiatrist John O’Reardon have discovered that the antidepressant Zoloft may help NES patients like Rosof, who’s dropped 40 pounds since he started taking it a year ago. And Schneck and Winkelman have found two drug cocktails that appear to help 70 percent of SRED patients. Within two weeks of starting one of them, Shelly Egemo was feeling better. Her good humor is back. Best of all, Shelly’s Snack Shop is out of business. [br] Which of the following is NOT true according to the passage?
选项
A、Shelly owned a snack shop.
B、Shelly was a sleep walker.
C、Shelly suffered from SRED.
D、Shelly is recovering now.
答案
A
解析
本题考查对第一段的理解,选项B、C和D文章中都提到过,故排除。选项A与原文不符,Shelly并没有开零食店,所谓零食店是指Shelly放食物的床边。故A为正确答案。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3831386.html
相关试题推荐
Shelly’ssnackshopwasthenamethatBrianEgemoofBadger,Iowa,appliedt
Asheappliedsunscreentohisyoungdaughter’sface,DaraO’Rourke,professo
Asheappliedsunscreentohisyoungdaughter’sface,DaraO’Rourke,professo
Asheappliedsunscreentohisyoungdaughter’sface,DaraO’Rourke,professo
Asheappliedsunscreentohisyoungdaughter’sface,DaraO’Rourke,professo
Asheappliedsunscreentohisyoungdaughter’sface,DaraO’Rourke,professo
Asheappliedsunscreentohisyoungdaughter’sface,DaraO’Rourke,professo
Asheappliedsunscreentohisyoungdaughter’sface,DaraO’Rourke,professor
Asheappliedsunscreentohisyoungdaughter’sface,DaraO’Rourke,professor
Asheappliedsunscreentohisyoungdaughter’sface,DaraO’Rourke,professor
随机试题
Theyhavedoneawaywith______LatinforuniversityentranceatHarvard.A、influ
Whatdoesthemanwant?[br][originaltext]W:ThisistheNationalEducational
耳廓化脓性软骨膜炎最常见的致病菌是()A.铜绿假单胞菌 B.变形杆
患者男性,60岁,右上前磨牙及第一、二磨牙残根,糖尿病病史10年,规律服药,控制
小儿热能需要与成人的主要不同点是()A.小儿排泄损失热能较高,活动所需热
绘制中华人民共和国简图,并标示出120°E、105°E、90°E三条经线和30°
与小儿囟门迟闭密切相关的是A.脾 B.肝 C.肺 D.心 E.
患者女,62岁,血清蛋白电泳发现:γ和β区带之间有一条密集深染的区带,为明确诊断
女性生殖器结核最常见的部位是 A.输卵管结核 B.卵巢结核 C.子宫内膜结
经典途径的C3转化酶是()。 A.C4b2b3b B.C3bnBb C
最新回复
(
0
)