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Weight
Training After Surgery Improves Quality of Life In Breast Cancer
Survivors
Researchers
believe that
weight training significantly improves the quality of life in women
recently treated for breast cancer. Minnesota doctors found that six
months of twice weekly exercise that improved strength and body
composition was enough to result in improvements in the overall
physical and emotional condition of the patients.
It is not
unusual for newly
diagnosed and treated breast cancer patients to suffer from multitude
quality of life limiting complaints, including insomnia, weight gain,
chronic fatigue, depression, and anxiety. Although treatments for
breast cancer have progressed rapidly, treatment for these secondary
complaints has only recently been compared.
There are
several physical
options available for the management of these secondary issues
involving breast cancer survivors. The researchers compared aerobic and
weight training and found weight training produced better results.
Tetsuya Ohira,
M.D. of the
Division of Epidemiology and Community Health at the University of
Minnesota and colleagues found that weight training improved the
women's overall physical and psychosocial quality of life score and
global psychological scores compared with controls. They found
significant improvements in body mass and upper body strength.
Evidently this had the greatest impact on symptoms.
A recent study
of the
effect of aerobic exercise on quality of life among recently treated
breast cancer survivors showed to positively affect only half the
number of survivors as the six months of strength training. The
strength / weight training study involved eighty-six women within 36
months of treatment, who were assigned either a weight training
exercise program or no treatment.
This was the
first study to
evaluate weight training and its effect on quality of life among breast
cancer survivors. "Changes in body composition and strength," conclude
the authors, may empower these women with "a sense of return to feeling
in control of their bodies that may translate into feeling greater
efficacy in other areas of life."
The study is
published in the May 1, 2006 issue of CANCER, a peer-reviewed journal
of the American Cancer Society.
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