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Diet
And Exercise May
Slow Prostate Cancer
Sweeping changes in diet and exercise, as well as the use of stress
management techniques, may slow the progression of early prostate
cancer, researchers report in the Journal of Urology.
Lead investigator Dr. Dean Ornish stated the results suggest
"that the progression of prostate cancer may be beneficially affected
by making comprehensive changes in diet and lifestyle."
Ornish of the University of California, San Francisco, and colleagues
note that men with prostate cancer are often advised to make changes
in diet and lifestyle, but the results of these changes have not
been well documented.
To investigate further, the researchers studied 93 prostate cancer
patients who had chosen not to undergo conventional treatment
but opted instead for a wait-and-see approach. At study entry,
the men had laboratory findings indicating that they had early
stage disease.
The men were randomly placed into a lifestyle change group or
a usual activity group. The lifestyle patients were prescribed
a vegan diet with fish oil and other supplements, moderate aerobic
exercise, a daily 1-hour period of relaxation via techniques such
yoga-based meditation and weekly participation in a support group.
At 1 year, none of the lifestyle patients but six of the usual
activity patients underwent treatment because of disease progression.
Further testing suggested that the lifestyle intervention inhibited
the growth of cancer cells.
Ornish added that "what affects prostate cancer may also have
implications for breast cancer as well."
SOURCE: Journal of Urology, September 2005.
More articles on Diet
and Exercise
Reference
Source 89
September
14, 2005
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