Neosplasms

Vocabulary (5 Minutes)

Directions: Try to guess the meaning of the highlighted words based on your knowledge of English. In each set of words, underline the two words that have similar meanings to the words in bold letters on the left. Use your dictionaries if necessary. The first one has been done for you.

1.       benign

a. harmless

b. kind

c. safe

2.      malignant

a. evil

b. harmful

c. dangerous

3.      sophisticated

a. easy

b. complex

c. high-level

4.      erudite

a. well-educated

b. scholarly

c. bookish

5.      malevolent

a. harmful

b. spiteful

c. dangerous

6.      irritation

a. soreness

b. annoyance

c. tenderness

7.      island

a. atoll

b. isle

c. land mass

8.      premise

a. argument

b. principle

c. idea

9.      primitive

a. very simple

b. primeval

c. primordial

Rapid Reading Warm-Up (30 Seconds)

Directions: The exercise below has 25 problems that will help you read faster. You will have only 30 seconds to finish. You will probably not finish all 25 problems, but you are to work as quickly as you can. Be careful not to make any error, so read rapidly but carefully. In this exercise, there are six words: one word to the left of the line and five to the right. Read the word on the left and then find it among the five words to the right. Once you have found it, circle it.

Example

raft

rift

rate

raft

rote

reef

1.      medicine

medical

medics

medicine

medicines

medic

2.      cancer

cancers

canker

concern

cancer

cannon

3.      sanitize

sanity

sanitary

sanitize

sensitive

sensitivity

4.      means

mean

mane

mares

moans

means

5.      found

fount

foundry

fondle

finds

found

6.      increase

increase

increment

increases

incredible

increased

7.      growth

grown

grout

grunt

growth

growths

8.      cells

calls

culls

cells

cell

cellular

9.      necessary

necessarily

necessitate

necessary

necrosis

needs

10.  response

responds

responses

respondent

response

responded

11.  range

ranged

ranger

ranges

ranging

range

12.  discovered

discovery

discovered

discovers

discovering

discord

13.  behind

behold

beyond

behest

benign

behind

14.  stages

stooges

stage

staged

stages

stags

15.  left

lift

loft

left

lifts

lofted

16.  still

stall

still

stile

stool

stalls

17.  lose

lose

loser

loses

loose

looser

18.  longer

longer

linger

lunge

longest

lunges

19.  broken

bracken

broker

brook

break

broken

20.  type

tape

types

taper

tips

type

21.  run

ruin

runt

run

ran

rune

22.  likely

lackey

likes

likely

liken

lily

23.  treat

trait

trot

trout

tree

treat

24.  more

mare

moor

moron

more

main

25.  termed

tamed

terms

tamer

termed

tames

 

First Reading (3 Minutes for Preview – 3½ Minutes for Reading)

Directions: Starting with the first sentence of the passage, read as quickly as you can for three and a half minutes. Circle the last word you read when the time is up.

Second Reading (3½ Minutes)

Directions: Starting with the first sentence of the passage, read as quickly as you can for three and a half minutes. Circle the last word you read when the time is up.

Third Reading (3½ Minutes)

Directions: Starting with the first sentence of the passage, read as quickly as you can for three and a half minutes. Circle the last word you read when the time is up.

Fourth Reading (3½ Minutes)

Directions: Starting with the first sentence of the passage, read as quickly as you can for three and a half minutes. Circle the last word you read when the time is up.

Line

No

Word

Count

 

 

 

 

 

 

5

 

 

 

 

10

 

 

 

 

15

 

 

 

 

20

 

 

 

 

25

 

 

 

 

30

 

 

 

 

35

 

 

 

 

Code of Denial

by Tena Moyer

The medical term for cancer is neoplasia. The root of the word, -plasia, means growth. Neo means new, so neoplasia means, literally, new growth. In theory, neoplasia can refer to either benign or malignant growth, but in practice we use it to mean cancer. Neoplasia is a sophisticated and erudite substitution for the ugly and banal word cancer. It titillates the ears and the intellect, and it sanitizes cancer of its malevolent and frightening connotations. Tumor refers to any kind of swelling, whether cancerous or not. It is the word we use to tell our patients we have found something, but we don’t know what it is.

Hyperplasia is an increase in cell numbers and rate of growth, but the cells are still normal, and they are recognizable as the tissue from which they originated. Hyperplasia is not necessarily abnormal or a harbinger of neoplastic disease. In fact, it often represents the body’s normal growth or healthy response to some irritation or insult. Thus, the white spots on those red, swollen, and painful tonsils represent islands of hyperplastic white cells multiplying in response to infection. Hyperplasia is usually benign (doctorese for harmless) and will usually resolve itself spontaneously or with appropriate treatment. Occasionally, however, it progresses to a level of cellular abnormality called dysplasia – deranged growth.

Dyplastic cells are more clearly precancerous and range from mild to moderate to severe. As they progress through these stages, the cells become increasingly abnormal in appearance. Dysplasia discovered and treated early can be cured. This is the premise behind those yearly Pap smears that women endure. But dysplasia left undetected will almost invariably progress to neoplasia.

Neoplastic cells can still resemble their parent tissue type, but they will gradually lose their ability to perform their original function. Thus, thyroid cells look less and less like normal thyroid tissue and progressively lose their ability to synthesize and secrete thyroid hormones. Eventually, the cells become so regressed and primitive that they no longer resemble any identifiable tissue type. They are misshapen and grotesque with broken chromosomes and distorted cellular structures, and on the thin glass of a microscope slide, they stain dark blue because they are dividing at an accelerated rate. Neoplasia, at this stage, is termed anaplasia – backward growth.

Anaplastic gradations run from mildly to moderately to highly anaplastic. As the level of cellular deformation and disorganization increases, the tumor becomes increasingly aggressive and malignant, more likely to metastasize and more difficult to treat.

 

 

 

 

 

50

 

 

 

 

107

 

 

 

156

 

 

 

201

 

 

 

 

248

 

 

 

 

296

 

 

 

 

352

 

 

 

 

 

 

410

Reading Comprehension (10 Minutes)

Directions:  Circle the letter next to the statement that best answers the following questions.

1.       This article is missing a/an _____.

a.       introduction and conclusion

b.       thesis statement and conclusion

c.       main points and conclusion

2.       The article has _____ main points.

a.       2

b.       3

c.       4

3.       According to the article, why do most people use the word “neoplasia” rather than “cancer.”?

a.       The word “cancer” is more frightening than “neoplasia.”

b.       Individuals want other people to think they are educated.

c.       The word “neoplasia” is the term used by scientists and doctors.

4.       What is the main idea of paragraph 3?

a.       Hyperplasia, the second stage leading to neoplasia, represents the body’s response to irritation or infection.

b.       Hyperplasia, the second stage of neoplasia, always progresses to dysplasia.

c.       Hyperplasia, the second stage of neoplasia, is white spots on tonsils.

5.       At which stage do cells become increasingly abnormal in appearance?

a.       hyperplasia

b.       dysplasia

c.       anaplasia

6.       Which type of may be cancerous?

a.       dysplasia

b.       neoplasia

c.       anaplasia

7.       Doctors use the term _____ when they are unsure what they have found.

a.       cancer

b.       sanitize

c.       tumor

8.       Women have yearly Pap smears because _____.

a.       dysplasia can be cured if it is detected early

b.       doctors recommend they have Pap smears at least once a year

c.       dysplasia means neoplasia will develop

9.       What is the thesis of this article?

a.       Doctors should use words that do not frighten their patients.

b.       Cancer can be treated if it is discovered in its early stage.

c.       There are three stages of development leading to neoplasia.

10.   Because neoplastic cells still resemble their parent tissue type, they gradually are unable to perform their original function.

a.       True

b.       False

11.   In line 15, “swollen” means _____.

a.       enlarged

b.       collapsed

c.       reduced

12.   In line 17, “resolve” means _____.

a.       solve

b.       decide

c.       determine

13.   In line 17, “spontaneously” means _____.

a.       suddenly

b.       unexpectedly

c.       on its own accord

14.   In line 19, “deranged” means _____.

a.       crazy

b.       abnormal

c.       insane

15.   In line 29, “synthesize” means _____.

a.       produce

b.       integrate

c.       combine

16.   In line 36, “misshapen” does not mean _____.

a.       well-formed

b.       malformed

c.       distorted

17.   In line 31, “grotesque” means _____.

a.       extremely strange

b.       beautiful

c.       smart

18.   In line 38, “metastasize” means _____.

a.       disappear

b.       spread

c.       vanish