My first Toshiba Win 7 x64 laptop only came with a 32 bit disk - they must have thought I needed a coaster
I have Win 7 SP1 ISOs for 32 and 64 bit with which I can burn and send you a coupe of disks (one spare) for repair purposes - just PM me your address and let me know if you are using 32 or 64 bit.
The 64 bit ISO has the eicfg file removed so that it now covers from Starter to Ultimate, so can be used for the offboot sfc /scannow for your Pro.
The 32 bit is for Home Premium but I can remove the eicfg file to also make that an universal install disk.
To perform an offboot sfc /scannow you need to change the Boot order for the machine to boot up with the disk.
This can be done by tapping F2 to boot up into the BIOS to change it permanently (recommended by me) or by tapping F12 which will get you a one off boot change.
These keys are typical but can differ with make and model, but you will see which keys apply to your machine as you are momentarily prompted to press either as the machine boots up, so take notice of which they are the next time you boot up.
For instructional purposes we'll use F12.
Tapping that will get you a choice of options to select as the first media the machine will check - select the disk drive - may be listed as ODD, insert the disk and press enter.
You'll get a 10 second prompt to press any key to boot from CD/DVD.
After it has loaded the files you may be presented with an inverse window with Windows Setup (EMS Enabled) - press enter.
When prompted, change/confirm the currency etc. then click on Repair your Computer on the splash screen.
When it looks for the OS to repair, make a note of its location as it may not always be C:
Select Command Prompt from the Window Recovery Environment (WRE).
You can use this cmd to confirm the location of the OS -
bcdedit |find "osdevice"
That is the Pipe symbol before find and is the upper case of \
Using whichever partition letter, enter (assuming c ) -
sfc /scannow /offbootdir=C:\ / offwindir=C:\Windows
For clarity, there's a space before each forward slash.
This takes a little bit longer than running the file check in Windows, but reports the same.
Remove the disk, enter exit to close the cmd window and Restart when done.
This cmd checks the file system on the computer against those in the install disk and hopefully will repair those .dlls for you.