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1 . Dental health: Brush with confidence

Children should be taught to brush their teeth regularly. But the suspicion remains among some People, dentists included, that even so, certain children are doomed to develop dental cavities. The hypothesis behind this fear is that some combinations of genes may give rise to the sorts of oral bacteria which are responsible for cavities. If true, that would be sad for the youngsters concerned.

But a study just published in Cell Host and Microbe, by Andres Gomez and Karen Nelson of the J. Craig Venter Institute, in San Diego, suggests it isn’t true.

The mouth is home to many species of microbes. Most are good. Some, though, are well known to secrete acidic waste products when fed sugar. This acidity weakens teeth, causing them to decay.

To try to find out whether a child’s genes play any role in encouraging such acid-secreting bugs, Dr Gomez and Dr Nelson set up an experiment with twins.

Their“volunteers”were 280 pairs of fraternal twins and 205 pairs of identical twins, all aged between five and 11, who had not taken antibiotics during the previous six months. The children were asked to stop brushing their teeth the evening and the morning before the crucial moment of data collection. This was when the researchers swabbed the children’s gingival sulci(the clefts between teeth and gums, in which bacteria collect)to find out what was there. The children also had their teeth scored by dentists as belonging to one of three categories: having no signs of current or previous dental cavities: having signs of current or previous cavities affecting the enamel(a tooth’s hard, outer layer); or having signs of cavities that penetrated the enamel and allected the underlying dentine as well.

Dr Gomez and Dr Nelson found that, though identical twins shared many groups of bacteria which were not shared by fraternal twins, none of these was a type responsible for cavities. Moreover, similarities in bacterial flora were greatest among five-to seven-year-olds, weaker among seven- to nine-year-olds and weakest among nine-to 11-year-olds. This suggests that any role genes do play in regulating the mouth’s ecology fades with time.

Far from supporting the idea that some children are fated to suffer from cavities no matter how well they brush their teeth, these results make it clear that the power to control the growth of the relevant bacteria is very much within reach of children and their parents. Brushing, however, may not be the only approach. Avoiding sugary foods is obviously de rigueur. It seems likely, though, that which other foods a child eats may help shape his oral ecosystem, too. This is an area of ongoing research. But, as in the intestines(肠道), so in the mouth, scientific medicine is at last coming to grips with the fact that the mixture of microbes present is both important and capable of manipulation, to the benefit of the host.

1. What does“hypothesis”refer to in paragraph 1?
A.Children’s failure to brush their teeth properly leads to tooth decay.
B.Some children are programmed to develop tooth decay.
C.Youngsters are suspicious of the effectiveness of tooth-brushing.
D.Some genes are more likely to lead to dental cavites.
2. Dr Gomez and Dr Nelson conducted an experiment to find out _______.
A.whether genes have anything to do with dental decay
B.which group of twins are more likely to have decayed teeth
C.what kinds of foods tend to give rise to tooth decay
D.why the ecosystem of the intestines is similar to that of the mouth
3. Which of the following statements is UNTRUE according to the passage?
A.Scientists are not yet sure how ecosystem of the mouth is formed.
B.The role genes play in controlling ecosystem of the mouth weakens with the time.
C.The children are classified into three groups according to the degrees of dental cavities.
D.Identical twins are not as genetically close to each other as fraternal twins.
4. What can we learn from the last paragraph?
A.The existence of multiple microbes benefits children’s oral ecosystem.
B.What a child eats enhances the healthfulness of a child’s oral ecosystem.
C.Cutting down on sugar intake is the most likely way to prevent tooth decay.
D.Parents are in no position to help their children maintain healthy oral ecosystem.
2019-12-19更新 | 539次组卷 | 1卷引用:上海市浦东新区2017-2018学年高三上学期期末教学质量英语(含听力)试题
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