Exercise for breast cancer survivors: Research evidence and clinical guidelines. Phys Sportsmed 2002;30(8):33-42.Courneya KS, Mackey JR, McKenzie DC. Exercise for breast cancer survivors: research evidence and clinical guidelines. Phys Sportsmed 2002;30:33-42....
Exercise Precautions After Breast Cancer. Besides the general contraindications for any older McCaughan S, Sexton DL: A retrospective investigation of the relationship between aerobicexercise PN: Exercise, immunity, and susceptibility to infection: a J-shaped relationship?
In breast cancer survivors, intensity prescriptions for healthy adults result in considerably too intense training if HRR is used as guiding factor. Prescriptions using VO2max result in a slightly too low exercise intensity, whereas recommendations in percentages of HRmax appear valid. Implications for...
(2002). Exercise for breast cancer survivors. Physician and Sportsmedicine, 30(8). Retrieved December 28, 2007, from http://www.physsportsmed .com/issues/2002/08_02/courneya.htmCourneya K,,Mackey J,McKenzie D.Exercise for breast cancer survivors.Physician and Sportsmedicine. 2002...
Today I would like to talk to you about exercise and the risk for recurrence of breast cancer. Several studies have suggested that women who exercise more have lower risk for recurrence. These studies looked at self-reports of exercise and typically found that women who exercised more through...
Introduction: Five-year survival from breast cancer in Australia is 87%. Hence, ensuring a good quality of life (QOL) has become a focal point of cancer research and clinical interest. Exercise during and after treatment has been identified as a potential strategy to optimise QOL of women diag...
Unequal risks for breast cancer associated with different hormone replacement therapies: results from the E3N cohort study The goal of this study was to assess and compare the association between different HRTs and breast cancer risk, using data from the French E3N cohort ... A Fournier,F ...
Breast cancer risk was lower for women in the lowest quartile of average occupational sitting time and in the highest quartile of average occupational energy expenditure (adjusted hazard ratio (HR): 0.81 and 0.73, respectively, Pp0.05). Adult exercise at or above the recommended level (8 ...
"For this study, we took a deeper look into the relationship between people who exercise more and have less of a risk ofcancer; previously, it was believed that there wasn't anything mechanistically linked. Rather, it was just the general benefits seen in your body because of ahealthy life...
While it is generally accepted that exercise can benefit a person's overall health, a recently published paper has found a direct link between muscle contraction and a reduction in breast cancer.