1 |
The primary purpose of the passage is to
treat the accepted generalizations about organ transplantation
in which of the following ways? |
A. |
Explicate their main features |
B. |
Suggest an alternative to them |
C. |
Examine their virtues and limitations |
D. |
Criticize the major evidence used to support them |
E. |
Present findings that qualify them |
2 |
It can be inferred from the passage that
the author believes that an important difference among strains
of rats is the |
A. |
size of their livers |
B. |
constitution of their skin |
C. |
strength of their immune-response reactions |
D. |
sensitivity of their antigens |
E. |
adaptability of their lymphocytes |
3 |
According to the hypothesis of the author,
after a successful liver transplant, the reason that rats do
not reject further transplants of other organs from the same
donor is that the |
A. |
transplantation antigens of the donor and the
recipient become matched |
B. |
lymphocytes of the recipient are weakened by the
activity of the transplanted liver |
C. |
subsequently transplanted organ is able to repair the
damage caused by the recipient's immune-response
reaction |
D. |
transplanted liver continues to be the primary locus
for the recipient's immune-response reaction |
E. |
recipient is unable to manufacture the lymphocytes
necessary for the immune-response reaction |
4 |
Which of the following new findings about
strains of rats that do not normally reject liver transplants,
if true, would support the authors' hypothesis?
- Stomach transplants are accepted by the recipients in all cases.
- Increasing the strength of the recipient's immune-response reaction can induce liver-transplant rejection.
- Organs from any other donor can be transplanted without rejection after liver transplantation.
- Preventing lymphocytes from being concentrated at the liver transplant produces acceptance of skin transplants.
|
A. |
II only |
B. |
I and III only |
C. |
II and IV only |
D. |
I, II, and III only |
E. |
I, III, and IV only |