Immediate increase in perceived energy after exercise during the course of chemotherapy treatment for breast cancer
(2022) In European Journal of Oncology Nursing 58.- Abstract
PURPOSE: Exercise during chemotherapy has beneficial long-term effects on women with breast cancer, but short-term beneficial changes have been less investigated. Though short-term changes may be important as a encouraging factor, this study aimed to investigate immediate changes in self-reported energy, stress, nausea and pain following a single exercise session during chemotherapy.
METHODS: Forty-six women who were exercising while undergoing adjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer were included between October 2016 and April 2018. Self-reported energy and stress were assessed before, immediately after and 3 h after exercise sessions by the Stress-Energy Questionnaire. On the same questionnaire nausea and pain were assessed by a... (More)
PURPOSE: Exercise during chemotherapy has beneficial long-term effects on women with breast cancer, but short-term beneficial changes have been less investigated. Though short-term changes may be important as a encouraging factor, this study aimed to investigate immediate changes in self-reported energy, stress, nausea and pain following a single exercise session during chemotherapy.
METHODS: Forty-six women who were exercising while undergoing adjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer were included between October 2016 and April 2018. Self-reported energy and stress were assessed before, immediately after and 3 h after exercise sessions by the Stress-Energy Questionnaire. On the same questionnaire nausea and pain were assessed by a Visual Analog Scale. The measurements were completed at four time points during cycles 2 and 5 of the 6-cycle chemotherapy course.
RESULTS: Energy level increased immediately after a single exercise session for three out of four periods during the chemotherapy course (p < 0.01), with a larger increase when energy was lower before the session (p < 0.01). Three hours after the exercise session, the energy was about the same level as before the exercise session. Stress decreased immediately after the session during cycle two (p < 0.01) but not cycle five. There were no changes in nausea or pain.
CONCLUSIONS: Patients undergoing chemotherapy should be informed not only about the long-term advantages of exercise, but also immediate benefits in terms of increased energy. The energy increase both while exercise in the beginning and toward the end of the chemotherapy course, this short-term advantageous consequence may strengthen patients' motivation to exercise. Clinicians should also inform patients that exercise does not seem to worsen nausea and pain.
(Less)
- author
- Johnsson, Anna
LU
; Sjovall, Katarina
; Demmelmaier, Ingrid
; Wagner, Philippe
LU
; Olsson, Håkan
LU
and Tornberg, Åsa LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2022-05-28
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- in
- European Journal of Oncology Nursing
- volume
- 58
- article number
- 102149
- publisher
- Churchill Livingstone
- external identifiers
-
- pmid:35640479
- pmid:35640479
- scopus:85130714466
- ISSN
- 1462-3889
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.ejon.2022.102149
- project
- Fysisk aktivitet och stillasittande vid bröstcancer - Inverkan på incidens, välmående och prognos
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- cde56e65-57d0-4dda-9dfa-8b9c0d816791
- date added to LUP
- 2022-05-12 15:14:36
- date last changed
- 2025-03-21 21:38:05
@article{cde56e65-57d0-4dda-9dfa-8b9c0d816791, abstract = {{<p>PURPOSE: Exercise during chemotherapy has beneficial long-term effects on women with breast cancer, but short-term beneficial changes have been less investigated. Though short-term changes may be important as a encouraging factor, this study aimed to investigate immediate changes in self-reported energy, stress, nausea and pain following a single exercise session during chemotherapy.</p><p>METHODS: Forty-six women who were exercising while undergoing adjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer were included between October 2016 and April 2018. Self-reported energy and stress were assessed before, immediately after and 3 h after exercise sessions by the Stress-Energy Questionnaire. On the same questionnaire nausea and pain were assessed by a Visual Analog Scale. The measurements were completed at four time points during cycles 2 and 5 of the 6-cycle chemotherapy course.</p><p>RESULTS: Energy level increased immediately after a single exercise session for three out of four periods during the chemotherapy course (p < 0.01), with a larger increase when energy was lower before the session (p < 0.01). Three hours after the exercise session, the energy was about the same level as before the exercise session. Stress decreased immediately after the session during cycle two (p < 0.01) but not cycle five. There were no changes in nausea or pain.</p><p>CONCLUSIONS: Patients undergoing chemotherapy should be informed not only about the long-term advantages of exercise, but also immediate benefits in terms of increased energy. The energy increase both while exercise in the beginning and toward the end of the chemotherapy course, this short-term advantageous consequence may strengthen patients' motivation to exercise. Clinicians should also inform patients that exercise does not seem to worsen nausea and pain.</p>}}, author = {{Johnsson, Anna and Sjovall, Katarina and Demmelmaier, Ingrid and Wagner, Philippe and Olsson, Håkan and Tornberg, Åsa}}, issn = {{1462-3889}}, language = {{eng}}, month = {{05}}, publisher = {{Churchill Livingstone}}, series = {{European Journal of Oncology Nursing}}, title = {{Immediate increase in perceived energy after exercise during the course of chemotherapy treatment for breast cancer}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejon.2022.102149}}, doi = {{10.1016/j.ejon.2022.102149}}, volume = {{58}}, year = {{2022}}, }