乳腺癌幸存者对阻力运动的急性反应与手臂淋巴水肿的后期发展:随机交叉试验的探索性后续研究

Stine Munck , Peter Oturai , Sandra C. Hayes , Kira Bloomquist
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景在有淋巴水肿风险的乳腺癌幸存者中,人们观察到淋巴功能和手臂体积的变化与一次运动有关,并有可能预测乳腺癌相关手臂淋巴水肿(BCRaL)。这项新颖的探索性研究考察了抗阻力运动的急性淋巴反应以及乳腺癌相关臂淋巴水肿高危女性日后的乳腺癌相关臂淋巴水肿发展情况。在每次运动前后(运动后、24 小时和 72 小时)对运动反应进行评估,包括细胞外液(L-Dex;生物阻抗光谱仪 (BIS))、臂间容积百分比差(IVD;双能 X 射线吸收仪 (DXA))和症状(数字评分表,0-10 (NRS))。随访时的 BCRaL 定义为出现一个客观指标(L-Dex >10,变化≥+6.5,IVD >5%)加上一个客观或主观指标(臂间症状≥1 或目测)。结果在后来发展为 BCRaL 的参与者(n = 5)中,没有观察到对运动有类似急性反应的趋势。结论这项探索性研究的结果表明,没有证据表明阻力运动的急性反应可以预测 BCRaL 的发展。
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Acute response to resistance exercise and later development of arm lymphedema in breast cancer survivors: An exploratory follow-up of a randomized cross-over trial

Background

In breast cancer survivors at risk for lymphedema, variation in lymphatic function and arm volume has been observed related to a bout of exercise, with potential for prediction of breast cancer-related arm lymphedema (BCRaL). This novel, exploratory study examined the acute lymphatic response to resistance exercise and later development of BCRaL in women at high risk for BCRaL.

Methods

One year after participation in a cross-over trial evaluating the acute lymphatic response to upper-extremity resistance exercise (low-and heavy-load), participants were assessed for BCRaL (n ​= ​16). The response to exercise was assessed before and after (post, 24- and 72-hrs) each exercise bout as extracellular fluid (L-Dex; bioimpedance spectroscopy (BIS)), interarm volume % difference (IVD; Dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA)) and symptoms (Numeric rating scale, 0–10 (NRS)). BCRaL at follow-up was defined as presence of one objective indicator (L-Dex >10, change ≥+6.5, IVD >5%) plus one objective or subjective indicator (interarm symptom ≥1 or visual inspection). Descriptive statistics were used to compare the acute response between participants with and without BCRaL at follow-up.

Results

No trends indicating a similar acute response to exercise was observed in participants who later developed BCRaL (n ​= ​5). There were no observable differences in acute lymphatic response between participants that developed BCRaL and those who did not, both at an individual and group level.

Conclusions

Findings from this exploratory study showed no evidence to suggest that the acute response to resistance exercise can predict BCRaL development.

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