P á g i n a | 74 C) o Brasil passará a ser, em poucas décadas, o maior exportador de petróleo do continente. D) o Brasil desenvolveu uma tecnologia para explorar petróleo, no mar, em grandes profundidades. 18) Do fragmento, pode-se inferir que a Petrobras A) foi bem-sucedida em empreendimentos realizados na região Sudeste. B) contava, no início de seu funcionamento, com uma equipe mais qualificada. C) adota, de países vizinhos, medidas para minimizar os impactos ambientais. D) atua ao longo da área litorânea do Rio de Janeiro há cinqüenta anos. Leia o fragmento textual a seguir e responda às questões de 19 a 22. Brain Rays For years cancer patients have had recourse to a noninvasive surgical te chnique in which doctors zap tumors with focused beams of radiation. The technology was first used on brain -cancer patients because doctors can easily clamp the head in 3 place, keeping the tumor rock steady. More recently the machines have gotten better at compensating for the patient's movement – from breathing, say – allowing doctors to treat tumors elsewhere in 6 t he body. Now do ctors at Korea's St. Mary's Hospit al are using a device called CyberKnife, made by Accuray in Sunnyvale, California, to treat patients with severe depression and obsessive -compulsive disorder. Other doctors think the technique could be useful to treat 9 Parkinson's and epilepsy patients. Since the radiation creates pe rmanent lesions i n the b rain, the met hod is controversial and may take years to win acceptance. ELLISON, Jesse. Bra in Rays. Newsweek. New York, v. 149, n. 16/17 , April 16-23, 2007. p. 10. 19) As técnicas cirúrgicas não-invasivas a que o fragmento se refere foram inicialmente empregadas no tratamento de A) doença de Parkinson. B) convulsões epilépticas. C) câncer cerebral. D) distúrbios respiratórios
Soluções para a tarefa
As técnicas cirúrgicas não-invasivas a que o fragmento se refere foram inicialmente empregadas no tratamento de câncer cerebral, letra c.
For years cancer patients have had recourse to a noninvasive surgical technique in which doctors zap tumors with focused beams of radiation. The technology was first used on brain-cancer patients because doctors can easily clamp the head in 3 place, keeping the tumor rock steady. More recently the machines have gotten better at compensating for the patient's movement – from breathing, say – allowing doctors to treat tumors elsewhere in 6 the body. Now doctors at Korea's St. Mary's Hospital are using a device called CyberKnife, made by Accuray in Sunnyvale, California, to treat patients with severe depression and obsessive-compulsive disorder. Other doctors think the technique could be useful to treat Parkinson's and epilepsy patients. Since the radiation creates permanent lesions in the brain, the method is controversial and may take years to win acceptance.