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People with cancer usually get less active as symptoms or treatments make them feel lousy. Plus, certain therapies can weaken muscles, bones, even the heart. Not that long ago, doctors advised taking it easy.
Not anymore: Be as active as you're able, says Dr. Kathryn Schmitz of the University of Pennsylvania, lead author of the new guidelines.
"Absolutely it's as simple as getting up off the couch and walking," she says.
Exercise programs are beginning to target cancer survivors, like Livestrong at the YMCA, a partnership with cycling great and cancer survivor Lance Armstrong's foundation. The American College of Sports Medicine now certifies fitness trainers who specialize in cancer survivors.
But anyone starting more vigorous activity for the first time or who has particular risks -- like the painful arm swelling called lymphedema that some breast cancer survivors experience -- may need more specialized exercise advice, Schmitz says. They should discuss physical therapy with their oncologist, she advises.
For example, Schmitz led a major study that found careful weight training can protect against lymphedema, reversing years of advice to coddle the at-risk arm. But the average fitness trainer doesn't know how to safely offer that special training, she cautions.
Mary Lou Galantino of Wilmington, Del., is a physical therapist who specializes in cancer care -- and kept exercising when her own breast cancer was diagnosed at Penn in 2003. Then 42, she says she was on the treadmill within 24 hours of each chemo session, to stay fit enough to care for her two preschoolers.
"You can feel more energy" with the right exercise, says Galantino, a physical therapy professor at the Richard Stockton College of New Jersey. "I was giving my body up to the surgeons and chemo, but I could take my body back through yoga and aerobic exercise."
[Associated
Press;
Lauran Neergaard covers health and medical issues for The Associated Press in Washington.
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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