Seguici su acebook facebook Cerca nel sito:

Le ricerche di Gerona 2005

(23-09-06) Exercise found to extend lives of women with breast cancer



A study by researchers in Seattle, Wash. found that obese or overweight young women who exercise have better odds of surviving breast cancer.
"We found a beneficial effect on survival for exercise undertaken in the year before diagnosis, particularly among women who were overweight or obese near the time they were diagnosed with breast cancer," said Dr. Page E. Abrahamson of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle.
The study published in the journal Cancer looked at the survival rates of 1,264 women between the ages of 20 and 54 diagnosed with breast cancer between 1990 and 1992, as well as their level of physical activity prior to diagnosis. The researchers talked to the women within several months of diagnosis, and asked them to report on their exercise levels at ages 13, 20 and the 12 months before they were diagnosed with breast cancer.
During the eight to 10 years the women were followed, 290 women died. The study results showed the lower survival rates coincided with women who reported the lowest levels of physical activity. The women who reported the highest amount of physical activity during the 12 months leading up to their diagnosis had a 22 percent lower risk of death when compared to women who reported the lowest amount of exercise, even when the disease's stage and the patients' income level were factored in.
Women who reported high levels of activity, but were overweight or obese at the time of diagnosis showed a 30-percent reduction in mortality risk. The researchers added that more research is needed on the relationship between exercise and breast cancer, as their report is only one of a handful on such studies.
"If future research confirms that physical activity improves survival among women with breast cancer, programs and policies to promote such activity for this purpose may be adopted," Abrahamson said.
According to Abrahamson and colleagues, few modifiable lifestyle factors had been linked with improving breast cancer prognosis in the past, and the improving survival rates are generally attributed to earlier detection and improved treatment options.

Source: NewsTarget

News

  • (30-08-2018) The electronics in fluorescent bulbs and light emitting diodes (LED), rather than ultraviolet radiation, cause increased malignant melanoma incidence in indoor office workers and tanning bed users

    Leggi tutto

  • (30-08-2018) Mitocondri e peso forma

    Leggi tutto

  • (29-08-2018) Stroke now impacting younger patients as a result of the obesity epidemic; 4 in 10 are now aged 40-69

    Leggi tutto

  • (29-08-2018) Perdere peso non vuol dire perdere osso!

    Leggi tutto

  • (29-08-2018) Brain cholesterol: long secret life behind a barrier.

    Leggi tutto

  • (29-08-2018) Stile di vita sano? Si può, basta usare la fantasia

    Leggi tutto

  • (22-08-2018) Top 10 medical treatments that can make you SICKER than before you took them

    Leggi tutto

  • (22-08-2018) Meno ansia - C’è una associazione tra dieta e disturbi mentali?

    Leggi tutto

  • (22-08-2018) Dietary curcumin supplementation attenuates inflammation, hepatic injury and oxidative damage in a rat model of intra-uterine growth retardation.

    Leggi tutto

  • (22-08-2018) Dopo la gravidanza - Una dieta a basso indice glicemico se serve perdere peso

    Leggi tutto

  • (21-08-2018) Sleep Disturbances Can Be Prospectively Observed in Patients with an Inactive Inflammatory Bowel Disease.

    Leggi tutto

  • (21-08-2018) Anche i neo-papà soffrono della depressione post partum

    Leggi tutto


In evidenza

"L'informazione presente nel sito serve a migliorare, e non a sostituire, il rapporto medico-paziente."

Per coloro che hanno problemi di salute si consiglia di consultare sempre il proprio medico curante.

Informazioni utili