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Cancer Prevention and Management through Exercise and Weight Control [Minkštas viršelis]

Edited by (Harvard University, BIDMC, Boston, Massachusetts, USA)
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 606 pages, aukštis x plotis: 254x178 mm, weight: 453 g, 56 Tables, black and white; 57 Illustrations, black and white
  • Išleidimo metai: 19-Jun-2019
  • Leidėjas: CRC Press
  • ISBN-10: 0367391554
  • ISBN-13: 9780367391553
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 606 pages, aukštis x plotis: 254x178 mm, weight: 453 g, 56 Tables, black and white; 57 Illustrations, black and white
  • Išleidimo metai: 19-Jun-2019
  • Leidėjas: CRC Press
  • ISBN-10: 0367391554
  • ISBN-13: 9780367391553
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
..it is increasingly clear that cancer is also a disease of inertia. In this book, a broadly multidisciplinary group presents the evidence and provides the recommendations. The antidote to diseases of inertia is movement lets move!

John Potter, M.D.,Ph.D., from the Foreword

The American Cancer Society estimates that a third of all cancer deaths could be prevented through avoidance of obesity and the rejection of sedentary lifestyles. The World Health Organization also supports this claim. Additionally, these and other organizations now recognize the role that activity can play in improving the quality of life for cancer patients.

Cancer Prevention and Management through Exercise and Weight Control provides us with the support necessary to make a call to action. Itbrings together the contributions of world-class researchers to lay out the evidence and a plan of attack for coping with this crisis. The text begins by focusing on the research methods used in assessing the complex associations between activity, energy balance, and risk and prognosis. In comprehensive literature reviews, the authors consider the role of physical activity in the incidence of individual cancers, then explore the mechanisms that might explain this connection. They continue with a look at the relation between weight and cancer incidence, including a consideration of genetics.

Research is also provided linking physical activity and weight control to a cancer patients quality of life and prognosis. The work concludes with ideas on how a plan of action might be implemented at the individual, clinical, and public health levels. It also provides guidance on incorporating exercise and diet recommendations into clinical oncology practice.

Recenzijos

This volume is one of the only of its kind dedicated to helping healthcare providers establish a concrete plan allowing patients to control weight gain through exercise in order to forestall cancer. Expert researchers do an outstanding job delineating this material within a logical framework, looking at ways that physical activity impacts the incidence of cancer in the breast, prostate and colorectal regions it promotes a step away from drug-based therapies in favor of a more holistic approach to mitigating cancer risks. Bluntly, its a message [ to] those practicing medicine in the Western world should pay close and careful attention to. Recommended to all primary care physicians (in addition to dieticians and nurse practitioners) who serve as a patients first-line of defense against disease. In addition, this volume is highly recommended to all Health Science libraries because of its well-detailed and erudite examination of the influence physical activity has on the processes of cancer. John Aiello, in The Electric Review

is a collection of 35 chapters organized into 8 sections, each covering different aspects of the complex relationships among body weight, physical activity, cancer incidence, and cancer prognosis. Each chapter provides a short review and summary of research studies that have addressed a variety of methodological, epidemiological, experimental, and clinical issues related to the prevention and management of different cancers through physical activity and body-weight management. The organization of the chapters into section is logical, and each chapter includes a list of contents at the beginning. would be of value to any clinicians who works with patients who have cancer and those who have survived it. It would be an especially helpful resource to anyone who wants to learn more about the current state of knowledge in the relatively new linkage of cancer management, obesity, genetics, and physical activity. Anthony E. Kincaid, Associate Professor, Department of Physical Therapy, Creighton University, Nebraska, in Physical Therapy, Vol. 87, No. 5, p. 615, May 2007

The present volume is not a rehash of some long-past symposium. Rather, it contains 35 invited contributions, each with 50-200 references. In all, this text provides a very thorough, evidence-based summary of current knowledge in a rapidly growing area of research, and it will be an important resource for those working on exercise, obesity and cancer. Roy J. Shephard in Canadian Journal of Applied Physiology, June 2007

"The research presented in McTiernans text is truly ground-breaking Bluntly, its a message those practicing medicine in the Western world should pay close and careful attention to Recommended to all primary care physicians (in addition to dieticians and nurse practitioners) who serve as a patients first-line of defense against disease. In addition, this volume is highly recommended to all Health Science libraries because of its well-detailed and erudite examination of the influence physical activity has on the processes of cancer."

--The Electric Review

SECTION I Research Methods
Chapter 1 Observational Studies and Intervention Trials in Exercise, Diet, and Cancer Prevention Research
3(10)
Ross L. Prentice
Chapter 2 Physical Activity Measurement
13(12)
Barbara E. Ainsworth
Karen J. Coleman
Chapter 3 Measurement of Body Fat and Energy Balance
25(24)
Melinda Irwin
SECTION II Physical Activity and Cancer Incidence
Chapter 4 Physical Activity and Cancer Incidence: Breast Cancer
49(26)
Alpa V. Patel
Leslie Bernstein
Chapter 5 Physical Activity and Colorectal Cancer
75(16)
Martha L. Slattery
Chapter 6 Physical Activity and Prostate Cancer Risk
91(30)
Christine M. Friedenreich
SECTION III Mechanisms Associating Physical Activity with Cancer Incidence
Chapter 7 Physical Activity Effects on Sex Hormones
121(10)
Anne McTiernan
Chapter 8 Exercise and Insulin Resistance
131(26)
Laura Lewis Frank
Chapter 9 Mechanisms Associating Physical Activity with Cancer Incidence: Exercise and Immune Function
157(20)
Catherine M. Wetmore
Cornelia M. Ulrich
Chapter 10 Mechanisms Associating Physical Activity with Cancer Incidence: Exercise and Prostaglandins
177(6)
Maria Elena Martinez
Chapter 11 Mechanisms Associating Physical Activity with Cancer Incidence: Animal Models
183(16)
Lisa H. Colbert
Chapter 12 Physical Activity Intervention Studies in Humans
199(10)
Anne McTiernan
Chapter 13 Genetics, Physical Activity, and Cancer
209(10)
Tuomo Rankinen
SECTION IV Overweight/Obesity and Cancer Incidence
Chapter 14 Obesity, Weight Change, and Breast Cancer Incidence
219(14)
Rachel Ballard-Barbash
Chapter 15 Body Size, Obesity, and Colorectal Cancer
233(12)
Anne McTiernan
Martha L. Slattery
Chapter 16 Endogenous Hormone Metabolism and Endometrial Cancer
245(12)
Rudolf Kaaks
Annekatrin Lukanova
Chapter 17 Obesity and Pancreatic Cancer
257(12)
Dominique S. Michaud
Edward Giovannucci
Chapter 18 Obesity and Overweight in Relation to Adenocarcinoma of the Esophagus
269(20)
Cathrine Hoyo
Marilie D. Gammon
SECTION V Mechanisms Associating Obesity with Cancer Incidence
Chapter 19 Obesity and Sex Hormones
289(12)
Rudolf Kaaks
Anne McTiernan
Chapter 20 Obesity and Insulin Resistance
301(16)
George Blackburn
Belinda Waltman
Chapter 21 Obesity, Cytokines, and Other Inflammatory Markers
317(12)
Elisa L. Priest
Timothy S. Church
Chapter 22 Mechanisms Associating Obesity with Cancer Incidence: Animal Models
329(12)
Henry J. Thompson
Weiqin Jiang
Zongjian Zhu
Chapter 23 Genetics, Obesity, and Cancer
341(16)
Shelley Tworoger
Monica McGrath
SECTION VI Physical Activity and Cancer Prognosis
Chapter 24 Quality of Life and Fatigue in Breast Cancer
357(10)
Kerri Winters-Stone
Anna L. Schwartz
Chapter 25 Exercise and Quality of Life in Survivors of Cancer Other Than Breast
367(20)
Kerry S. Courneya
Kristin L. Campbell
Kristina H. Karvinen
Allya B. Ladha
Chapter 26 Physical Activity and Physiological Effects Relevant to Prognosis
387(18)
Page E. Abrahamson
Marilie D. Gammon
SECTION VII Energy Balance and Cancer Prognosis
Chapter 27 Energy Balance and Cancer Prognosis, Breast Cancer
405(32)
Pamela J. Goodwin
Chapter 28 Energy Balance and Cancer Prognosis: Colon, Prostate, and Other Cancers
437(10)
Cheryl L. Rock
SECTION VIII Implementation
Chapter 29 Physical Activity and Energy Balance
447(24)
Mikael Fogelholm
Chapter 30 Diet and Other Means of Energy Balance Control
471(16)
David Heber
Susan Bowerman
Chapter 31 Population-Based Approaches to Increasing Physical Activity
487(14)
Fiona Bull
Chapter 32 Incorporating Exercise and Diet Recommendations into Primary Care Practice
501(16)
Nicolaas P. Pronk
Chapter 33 Promoting Physical Activity in Cancer Survivors
517(8)
Anna L. Schwartz
Kerri Winters-Stone
Chapter 34 Obesity and Early Stage Breast Cancer Outcome
525(10)
Rowan T. Chlebowski
Michelle L. Geller
Chapter 35 Incorporating Weight Control into Management of Patients with Early Breast Cancer in the U.K.
535(26)
Michelle Harvie
Anthony Howell
Index 561
Anne McTiernan, M.D., Ph.D., is a faculty member in the Division of Public Health Sciences at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle, Washington, and a research professor in the University of Washington Schools of Medicine and Public Health and Community Medicine.