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Exercise
Before Surgery
Aids Recovery, Study Finds
Exercising before surgery can get the
body into shape and help recovery after an operation, U.S. researchers
announced.
They said tests on rats had confirmed
what many health experts had suspected -- that being in shape
helps the body bounce back after a prolonged recovery.
Perhaps the information could be
used to persuade insurers to cover "pre-habilitation" programs,
the team at the University of Missouri-Columbia said.
"It just makes sense that if we
could help people get in shape before surgery, we could eliminate
functional decline after an operation," Marybeth Brown, a professor
of physical therapy who led the study, said in a statement.
"The experiments showed that an
accelerated recovery and an exercise program before a period of
inactivity are inextricably connected."
Brown and colleagues tested rats
to confirm their theory.
Young and old rats were crippled
to simulate a long period of bed rest. Those who had been exercised
beforehand were able to recover, while out-of-shape rats were
not able to learn how to walk again without help.
The effect was much more marked
in the older rats, Brown said.
The benefits of exercise after
surgery are well known but Brown said she hoped her research would
help therapists and physicians understand the potential benefits
of exercise before surgery.
Reference
Source 89
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