Jeopardy! Round, Double Jeopardy! Round, or Tiebreaker Round clues (25 results returned)
#7601, aired 2017-10-02 | HISTORY OF MEDICINE WITH DR. OZ $400: (Dr. Oz presents the clue.) Realizing those who'd had cowpox didn't contract smallpox, Edward Jenner saw causality & took material from the arm of a dairy maid who had cowpox, making the first of these recorded in Western medicine an inoculation (or a vaccine) |
#7601, aired 2017-10-02 | HISTORY OF MEDICINE WITH DR. OZ $800: (Dr. Oz presents the clue.) Alexander Fleming happened to leave a Petri dish of staphylococci sitting around & found the bacteria had been killed by mold thus leading to the discovery of this antibiotic that has saved millions of lives penicillin |
#7601, aired 2017-10-02 | HISTORY OF MEDICINE WITH DR. OZ $1200: (Dr. Oz presents the clue.) Believing that bacteria caused infection & death, this British surgeon performed an 1877 operation under controlled antiseptic conditions, revolutionizing medicine (Joseph) Lister |
#7601, aired 2017-10-02 | HISTORY OF MEDICINE WITH DR. OZ $1600: (Dr. Oz presents the clue.) Hippocrates thought the body was ruled by blood, phlegm, yellow & black bile, each associated with a season & with one of the 4 elements... health depended on a balance of the 4 liquids known as these humors |
#7601, aired 2017-10-02 | HISTORY OF MEDICINE WITH DR. OZ $2000: (Dr. Oz presents the clue.) Many patients died from the first blood transplants of the 17th century, but the ABO blood system of 1901 & this one from 1940 named for a species of monkey have made them routine medical procedures rhesus |
#7538, aired 2017-05-24 | HEART SURGERY WITH DR. OZ $400: (Dr. Oz delivers the clue.) When a coronary artery is blocked, & drugs & angioplasty can't fix it, we go in for this type of surgery where new blood vessels go around the artery, maybe even a triple or quadruple version a bypass |
#7538, aired 2017-05-24 | HEART SURGERY WITH DR. OZ $800: (Dr. Oz delivers the clue.) As director of a center for integrative medicine, I appreciate a pioneer of integrated medicine, the African-American surgeon Daniel Hale Williams, who in 1893 sutured a man's pericardium, becoming one of the first Americans to perform this then-risky type of surgery open-heart surgery |
#7538, aired 2017-05-24 | HEART SURGERY WITH DR. OZ $1200: (Dr. Oz delivers the clue.) All the skill & technology that go into a heart transplant are no use without a donor; in 1996 it was a young man in the Bronx whose heart I put in this Yankee manager's brother Frank in a story that made a lot of hearts warmer in New York City & beyond (Joe) Torre |
#7538, aired 2017-05-24 | HEART SURGERY WITH DR. OZ $2000: (Dr. Oz delivers the clue.) Major heart surgery may involve an incision down the midline of the breastbone, medically called this; it's not as bad as it sounds because there are relatively few nerves in that area the sternum |
#7538, aired 2017-05-24 | HEART SURGERY WITH DR. OZ $2,200 (Daily Double): (Dr. Oz delivers the clue.) Replacement of these gateways that open & close is by far most common with the aortic & the mitral; they're on the left side of the heart so they endure higher pressure & wear out sooner than the other 2 valves |
#5920, aired 2010-05-14 | LIVING HEALTHY WITH DR. OZ $400: (Dr. Oz shows a plate of bananas, dates, strawberries, and other fruits.) One way to control high blood pressure is to counteract high levels of sodium in the average diet by eating foods rich in magnesium & this element--symbol K potassium |
#5920, aired 2010-05-14 | LIVING HEALTHY WITH DR. OZ $800: (Dr. Oz shows an anatomical animation on the monitor.) Though often blamed on stress, these interior wounds to the stomach or duodenum are typically the result of a bacterial infection an ulcer |
#5920, aired 2010-05-14 | LIVING HEALTHY WITH DR. OZ $1200: (Dr. Oz holds a snack bowl.) Eat a snack a half an hour before mealtime, so you're already feeling full & will eat less; you're reducing levels of the hunger-causing chemical ghrelin--one of these, like estrogen & insulin a hormone |
#5920, aired 2010-05-14 | LIVING HEALTHY WITH DR. OZ $1600: (Dr. Oz stands and bends one leg up at the knee to stretch it.) Stretching & strengthening the tendons & muscles in front of your leg can help you avoid this 2-word condition we docs call medial tibial stress syndrome shin splints |
#5920, aired 2010-05-14 | LIVING HEALTHY WITH DR. OZ $2,000 (Daily Double): (Dr. Oz shows an anatomical model on the monitor.) From the Latin for "under chamber", this gland's health is vital as it influences your appetite, your sex drive & also maintains normal body temperature the hypothalamus |
#5755, aired 2009-09-25 | DR. OZ $400: (Dr. Oz delivers the clue.) Stop, drop your shoulders & purse your lips to slow down & regain control if anxiety & breathlessness are aggravating each other in a vicious cycle, known as this kind of episode a panic attack (an anxiety attack accepted) |
#5755, aired 2009-09-25 | DR. OZ $800: (Dr. Oz scrubs in for surgery.) Two angles of this type combine to form a right angle, just like massage & yoga combine with surgery to create this form of medicine complementary |
#5755, aired 2009-09-25 | DR. OZ $1200: (Dr. Oz delivers the clue.) Controlled in the hypothalamus, this set of chemical processes slows down when you mindlessly slash your food intake, so you end up storing more fat metabolism |
#5755, aired 2009-09-25 | DR. OZ $1600: (Dr. Oz holds a heart.) This valve, which prevents the backflow of blood from the left ventricle to the left atrium, is named after the pope's hat the mitral valve |
#5755, aired 2009-09-25 | DR. OZ $2000: (Dr. Oz delivers the clue.) Perhaps because you need a stronger immune response as a kid, this gland, in which T cells mature, is the size of a heart in infants & shrinks as you age the thymus |
#5637, aired 2009-02-24 | HAVE A HEART WITH DR. OZ $400: (Dr. Oz delivers the clue holding a real heart.) This valve, whose name is from the Latin for "three points", prevents the backflow of blood from the right ventricle into the right atrium the tricuspid |
#5637, aired 2009-02-24 | HAVE A HEART WITH DR. OZ $800: (Dr. Oz delivers the clue, again holding a squishy human heart.) The sinoatrial node on the back wall of the right atrium, here, sends out electrical signals to regulate the heartbeat & is also known as this, like a mechanical device implanted to do the same thing a pacemaker |
#5637, aired 2009-02-24 | HAVE A HEART WITH DR. OZ $1,500 (Daily Double): (Dr. Oz holds two fingers to his neck.) When you check your pulse by placing two fingers on the side of your neck, you're feeling these arteries that supply the brain & face the carotid arteries |
#5637, aired 2009-02-24 | HAVE A HEART WITH DR. OZ $1600: (Dr. Oz delivers the clue from his office, with some product placement on his desk.) This severe constricting pain in the chest is a symptom of coronary artery disease, but 50% of heart attack patients never experience it an angina |
#5637, aired 2009-02-24 | HAVE A HEART WITH DR. OZ $2000: (Dr. Oz holds a small wire mesh tube.) These wire mesh tubes are used to prop open an artery during balloon angioplasty & expand & lock into place as the balloon is inflated a stent |
Final Jeopardy! Round clues (0 results returned)
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