Exercise May Beat
Fatigue in Prostate Cancer
Staying active through moderate walking
may help prevent fatigue in men undergoing radiation therapy for
prostate cancer, a UK study shows.
Cancer patients commonly develop
fatigue as the stress of the illness and the physical effects
of treatment take their toll. It's common for patients undergoing
treatment to be told to take it easy, and some may self-impose
limits on their daily activities, according to the study's lead
author Dr. Phyllis M. Windsor.
But in her team's study of 66 men
with cancer confined to the prostate gland, those who were physically
active during their month of radiation treatment showed no substantial
increase in fatigue. The same was not true of patients in the
non-exercising "control" group, according to findings published
in the August issue of the journal Cancer.
The findings are in line with research
with women undergoing radiation and chemotherapy for breast cancer,
noted Windsor, a cancer specialist at Ninewells Hospital in Dundee,
Scotland. It's thought, she told Reuters Health, that such results
"potentially apply to all groups of patients with cancer."
While rest may be the intuitive
response to fatigue, too much inactivity can make the problem
worse. Long periods of rest, Windsor said, may de-condition muscles
and roll back a person's capacity for exercise, making even routine
daily tasks tough to tackle.
Exercise, on the other hand, keeps
muscles conditioned, so that everyday activities require less
effort and are less taxing on the body. In addition, Windsor pointed
out, research suggests that exercise combats depression, which
can alter patients' perceptions of fatigue.
For the current study, the researchers
randomly assigned 66 men with localized prostate cancer to either
an exercise group or a control group. The exercisers walked at
a moderate pace for 30 minutes, three days per week; patients
in the control group were not discouraged from performing their
usual activities, but were told to rest if they became tired.
After four weeks of radiation therapy,
men in the control group were had greater fatigue than they did
before treatment; and one month later, these patients were still
showing signs of weariness.
In contrast, exercisers showed
no significant increase in fatigue at any point during the study,
according to the researchers.
Windsor said she and her colleagues
are planning a larger study to see if walking or, for patients
who cannot walk, chair-based exercises can counter fatigue in
patients with a range of cancers, including prostate, cervical,
uterine, bladder and kidney cancers.
SOURCE: Cancer, August 2004.
Reference
Source 89
August 19, 2004
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