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Exercise
Seen As Help in Cancer Fight
New nutrition and fitness guidelines
for those living after a cancer diagnosis say appropriate exercise
can help even the weakest eat better, feel less fatigue and recover
faster.
"It doesn't mean cancer survivors
have to all of a sudden start training for a marathon," cautions
Colleen Doyle of the American Cancer Society, who co-authored
the organization's new advice.
More than 150 cancer patients a
year trudge into Julie Main's weight room, often pale and weak
next to the more buff regulars at her California gym. For 10 weeks,
in a free program backed by the local cancer hospital, they rebuild
muscles their disease has laid to waste.
Patients aren't doing aerobics
at the Santa Barbara Athletic Club. But under the guidance of
general manager Main, a breast cancer survivor who started the
WellFit program with the Cancer Center of Santa Barbara, they
work on resistance machines to regain strength for everyday activities
carrying groceries, picking up a toddler, climbing stairs.
Pick a program carefully, Main
advises: one that specializes in cancer will encourage starting
exercise after the first two chemo cycles, sometimes the roughest,
and to skip the gym if your immune system gets too weak.
"There's a lot of germs in here,"
she says. "By the same token, in a lot of ways exercise builds
up their immune system and builds up their strength. There's a
fine line we walk, and we're very encouraging of the participants
to let us know what's going on with them medically."
Nearly two-thirds of cancer patients
live more than five years after diagnosis. And starting during
treatment, they face choices about food, dietary supplements and
physical activity that can affect quality of life, sometimes even
survival.
Yet it's difficult to find consumer-friendly
information that separates the fads and frauds from scientifically
backed choices. Hence the cancer society's new guidelines, published
in CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians.
Topping the advice: there's no
magic lifestyle choice that will keep cancer from returning. Beware
fads like Gerson therapy, with its emphasis on vegetable juices
and coffee enemas. Talk with your doctor about even the seemingly
innocuous high doses of vitamins, for instance, may actually
block certain cancer treatments from working.
In fact, the No. 1 protection against
another bout of cancer is to avoid being overweight, Doyle says.
Think of cancer and dangerous treatment-caused
weight loss called cachexia, not obesity, usually comes to mind.
Cachexia is a common problem, and the guidelines have tips, including
anti-nausea drugs, high-calorie drinks and making foods more moist
so they're easier to swallow.
But obesity is a risk factor both
for developing some common cancers, and for recurrences after
initial treatment. During therapy, overweight patients can lose
a maximum of 2 pounds a week with their oncologist's approval
and oversight and long-term survivors must maintain a healthy
weight, the guidelines say.
That's one area exercise helps.
But even cancer patients who aren't
overweight can benefit from physical activity, the guidelines
stress. It lifts spirits, decreases vomiting and constipation,
and, when tailored to increase strength, can help even people
who weigh too little maintain crucial lean body mass.
Do the right activity for your
level of disease. People undergoing radiation treatment, for instance,
should avoid swimming pools because the chlorine will irritate
their skin. The severely fatigued may do 10 minutes of stretching
exercises daily, until returning stamina allows more.
"A woman with a mastectomy is not
going to do the same exercises as a man with leukemia," says Main,
who underwent a mastectomy herself at age 36.
There are no certification standards
for cancer exercise programs, something the cancer society is
about to study. For now, ask if your cancer treatment center offers
referrals, or ask your doctor for individual exercise advice.
___
Reference
Source 102
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