Science Current Events | Science News | Brightsurf.com
 
Email a Friend Send to a friend
Printer Friendly Print Exercise and psychological counseling could ease cancer-related fatigue

Exercise and psychological counseling could ease cancer-related fatigue

October 23, 2007

Cancer patients suffering from symptoms of fatigue might find some relief through regular exercise and psychological counseling to deal with stress, according to a new review.

Fatigue is one of the most common symptoms of patients with cancer and those undergoing treatment with radiation and chemotherapy. According to the American Cancer Society, 90 percent of patients in cancer treatment experience fatigue that can range from "mild lethargy to feeling completely wiped out."




The reviewers, led by Paul Jacobsen of the H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center in Tampa, Fla., said that fatigue affects patients' quality of life, with one-third feeling that it, "interferes with their ability to work, relationships with others and physical and emotional well-being."

There has been growing interest in helping these patients manage the symptoms of exhaustion with nonpharmacological treatments, and the systematic review aimed to determine the effectiveness of psychological therapy and exercise in meeting the goal.

The review appears in the November issue of the journal Health Psychology. Each evidence-based review in this series centers on a specific psychological assessment or treatment conducted in the context of a physical disease process or risk reduction effort.

The reviewers evaluated 41 studies. Of these, 17 looked at activity-based interventions in which patients either performed supervised or home-based exercises three to five times a week, for exercise periods that ranged from 10 to 26 weeks. Some of these studies included patients undergoing or about to start cancer treatment, while others were comprised only patients who had completed treatment.

Twenty-four studies evaluated psychological interventions. There were a variety of types of interventions, including techniques such as weekly telephone counseling about how to conserve energy and group therapy to teach skills like stress management and relaxation training.

About half of the studies focused on patients who had breast cancer, while others included patients with more than one type of cancer, such as colorectal and prostate.

Jacobsen and his colleagues found that 44 percent of the activity-based trials and 50 percent of the psychological studies that were of good quality reported significant, if not earth shattering, results. Patients who received either of the two types of interventions reported less fatigue than patients in the control groups did, the researchers concluded.

"The overall effects of both psychological and activity-based interventions on fatigue were modest," Jacobsen said. "The effects of psychological interventions were sufficiently large, however, to say that they were unlikely to have occurred by chance alone using conventional definitions of statistical significance."

Jacobsen concluded the results only provide "limited support" for the use of these types of nonpharmacological treatments to manage cancer fatigue.

Steven Passik, associate attending psychologist at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, said that although there is currently limited research that interventions such as counseling or exercise have a strong benefit on fatigue, patients prefer to try these methods rather than take more medications.

"Some of the main barriers of managing cancer fatigue have proven to be a lack of communication from health care providers to patients about how to battle fatigue, as well as an overall reluctance of many patients to take any more drugs to treat the symptom," Passik said. "So, more research like this study is needed to find what types of interventions work best for patients."

Jacobsen added that if cancer patients do choose to exercise during their treatments, they should take caution.

"Patients should consult with their physicians before initiating an exercise regimen," he said. "They should also let their physician know if they plan to continue to engage in regular exercise while undergoing taxing treatments like chemotherapy."

Center for the Advancement of Health



Related Cancer-related Fatigue Current Events and Cancer-related Fatigue News Articles
Researchers say lack of sleep doubles risk of death- but so can too much sleep
Researchers from the University of Warwick, and University College London, have found that lack of sleep can more than double the risk of death from cardiovascular disease. However they have also found that point comes when too much sleep can also more than double the risk of death.

Cancer patients monitor fatigue in real time
Fatigue is one of the most common and distressing symptoms cancer patients experience during chemotherapy and radiation treatment, but it's difficult for health care professionals to accurately assess its severity.

Step by step, cancer patients use exercise to feel better
When individuals with breast or prostate cancer followed a moderate, home-based exercise program using resistance bands and walking, the patients had less fatigue during radiation treatments, greater strength and could walk farther and faster in only four weeks.

Immune systems in breast cancer survivors who suffer from fatigue fail to shut off after therapy
Breast cancer survivors who suffer from persistent, debilitating fatigue years after their diagnosis have something in common: their immune systems don't shut down following treatment.

Cancer patients' fatigue - new research shows it may be due more to depression and poor physical performance than physiological side effects
Fatigue - a common problem in patients who are recovering from leukaemia, lymphoma, myeloma and other haematological cancers - is associated with depression and reduced physical performance and not, as previously suggested, with anaemia, a flagging immune system or other physiological conditions. That is the conclusion of a German research team, reported today (Monday 19 July), in Annals of Oncology[1]. Cancer related fatigue - defined as an unusual and persistent sense of tiredness that can occur during or after treatment, may affect physical and mental ability and is not relieved by rest - is the most common and distressing problem for cancer patients after treatment. For many patients it
More Cancer-related Fatigue Current Events and Cancer-related Fatigue News Articles


Handbook of Cancer-Related Fatigue (Haworth Research Series on Malaise, Fatigue, and Debilitatio) (Haworth Research Series on Malaise, Fatigue, and Debilitatio)
by Roberto Patarca-Montero

Recognize and treat fatigue as a major symptom of cancer and cancer treatment! The Handbook of Cancer-Related Fatigue, by Dr. Roberto Patarca-Montero, the editor of the Chronic Fatigue Syndrome series from The Haworth Medical Press, focuses exclusively on fatigue as it relates to oncology. As more people every year are affected by cancer, treating the leading symptom becomes as important as...

Cancer-Related Fatigue (Treatment Guidelines For Patients, Version 1/December 2001)

Version 1/December 2001. NCCN/American Cancer Society. Pamphlet. 27...

Ginseng relieved cancer-related fatigue in trial.(Clinical Rounds): An article from: Skin & Allergy News
by Kerri Wachter

This digital document is an article from Skin & Allergy News, published by Thomson Gale on August 1, 2007. The length of the article is 566 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.Citation DetailsTitle: Ginseng...

Handbook of cancer-related fatigue. (Haworth research series)
by Roberto. Patarca-Montero

Exercise Intervention for Cancer-Related Fatigue.(Brief Article)(Statistical Data Included): An article from: Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport

This digital document is an article from Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, published by American Alliance for Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Dance (AAHPERD) on March 1, 2000. The length of the article is 4966 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker...

Handbook of Cancer-Related Fatigue
by Roberto Patarca-Montero

Cancer Related Anaemia and Fatigue: Recent Advances, Current Controversies
by A. Armour, C.J. Pallister

Chemotherapy-related anemia and fatigue in home care patients: A home care nurse's guide to recognition, assessment, and intervention
by Carol G Boyer

© 2009 BrightSurf.com