Subtitles section Play video
-
Rob: Hello, I'm Rob. Welcome to 6 Minute English.
-
With me today is Finn. Hello, Finn.
-
Finn: Hi Rob!
-
Rob: In this programme we're going to be talking about blood.
-
Finn: Yes. Blood? Did I ever tell you, Rob, that
-
I really hate the sight of blood? And I've even been known to faint
-
that's to lose consciousness - at the sight of a needle.
-
Rob: Come on, Finn. I think you've got a lot to learn.
-
You wouldn't be here without it, you know!
-
It's a fascinating topic. All sorts of discoveries are being made these days,
-
which could change medical science for ever.
-
Finn: Yes. Well, you are right, of course.
-
Blood was even thought to relate to human character.
-
People were hot-bloodied ─ quick to anger
-
or cold-bloodied ─ lacking in passion.
-
Rob: There were all the myths about vampires when
-
young blood was thought to revitalise older people.
-
There's a dreadful story that a Hungarian countess had hundreds of young women killed
-
so she could bathe in their blood and stay youthful-looking.
-
Finn: Right. OK. And in Roman times, if a young gladiator died in battle,
-
people used to drink his blood because they thought it would keep them healthy.
-
Rob: For 3,000 years, people have been cut or given leeches to let out the blood
-
because they thought that would make people better.
-
Incredibly, it carried on until the 19th century.
-
But it actually made people worse, or even killed them.
-
Finn: So I won't be doing that today.
-
Rob: OK. Instead, how about answering a question all about blood Finn?
-
Finn: Go on then.
-
Rob: If you laid out all the blood vessels in an adult body
-
end to end how long would they be? Would they be ... a) 30,000 miles b) 100,000 miles
-
or c) 200,000 miles long?
-
Finn: Well, let's say 100,000 miles. That's b).
-
Rob: OK. Well, we'll see if you got the right answer at the end of the programme.
-
OK, well let's talk more about blood now.
-
We've heard about blood in history but Finn,
-
did you know that today beauticians are running businesses in which people pay to have their blood extracted,
-
then injected into their face?
-
Finn: Yes I have heard about this.
-
It's thought to rejuvenate that's to give new life to - their skin.
-
Michael Mosley has had just that done to his face as an experiment.
-
He's a doctor and presenter with the BBC.
-
Let's listen to him talking about it.
-
He uses an expression that means "go faster".
-
Can you tell me what it is?
-
Michael Mosley: Sometimes known as the Vampire Facelift,
-
PRP ─ Platelet Rich Plasma therapy
-
claims to accelerate healing and reverse the signs of ageing.
-
First my blood is treated to make a concentrated solution of platelets in plasma.
-
Next, this is injected directly into my face.
-
Finn: Ouch! And the word he used was "accelerate".
-
Now that means to make faster.
-
Rob: And he said they "treated" his blood.
-
This means "changed or transformed" it.
-
Finn: Well, today, of course, controlled blood transfusion
-
is a completely normal medical practice that saves countless lives.
-
And blood donors ─ the people who give their blood
-
are an important part of healthcare.
-
Rob: Yes, Finn, but there's all sorts of other amazing things that blood can do.
-
If we are running at altitude ─ high up
-
the limbs get tired because there's not enough oxygen.
-
The blood then starts creating new red cells and pours them into the system.
-
That's why athletes often train in the mountains.
-
Finn: Altitude training, isn't it?
-
And, apparently, the different types of food you eat have an immediate effect on your blood,
-
or rather the element of blood called plasma.
-
So, if you eat a cholesterol-high breakfast, for example,
-
very soon after that you can see the fat in the blood.
-
Rob Nice. Ideas about how blood moves around your
-
body have changed a lot over the years too.
-
The Romans thought blood flowed one way and
-
came out of our feet and hands and was then burnt away.
-
But William Harvey in the 17thcentury
-
found that blood circulated via veins and arteries
-
these are the tubes in our body where blood is carried around.
-
Finn: And let's not forget clotting
-
that's when the blood hardens.
-
If our blood didn't clot when we cut ourselves we'd be dead within minutes.
-
It is really fascinating isn't it?
-
And we're just beginning to understand stem cells.
-
These are also in the blood and are used to repair various organs in the body.
-
Rob: Modern science is really helping us to understand
-
blood properly for the first time and showing us the way forward.
-
Finn: Now Rob, before my blood boils,
-
could you let me know the answer to the quiz question, please?
-
Rob: Yes. So, I asked you if you laid out all the
-
blood vessels in an adult body end to end how long would they be: 30,000 miles, 100,000 miles
-
or 200,000 miles?
-
Finn: Well, I said 100,000 miles.
-
Rob: Wow. And you know your blood vessels,
-
because you got that question right.
-
Finn: Well, I measured them earlier.
-
Rob: Good. And how do you feel about blood now?
-
Finn: Well, I'm probably a bit scared of it still.
-
But now that I know all of these wonderful things that it does,
-
I really get why it's so important.
-
Rob: Great. So, let's remind ourselves of some of the words we've said today, Finn.
-
Finn: Here we are:
-
faint
-
rejuvenate
-
transfusion
-
cholesterol-high
-
veins and arteries
-
clotting
-
accelerate
-
and treated
-
Rob: Thank you. Well, that's it for today.
-
Please visit bbclearningenglish.com to find more 6 Minute English programmes.
-
Until next time. Goodbye!
-
Finn: Goodbye!