A case study: Prescriptive exercise intervention after bilateral mastectomies

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Abstract

Exercise for cancer patients is gaining support. In the current case study, a female breast cancer patient was diagnosed with breast cancer at the age of 29 years; she underwent a left modified radical mastectomy. She developed cancer again in the opposite breast at the age of 57 years and had a right modified radical mastectomy. After the second mastectomy (the right breast), the patient received chemotherapy and radiation. Following her cancer treatments, she participated in an exercise intervention for 6 months at the University of Northern Colorado's Rocky Mountain Cancer Rehabilitation Institute. A 6-month reassessment showed that she increased her muscular strength and cardiovascular function in addition to attenuating her cancer-related fatigue and depression. It is recommended that health professionals work together to ensure that a collaborative effort is undertaken to increase functional work capacity that will significantly improve patients' quality of life.

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Carter, S. D., Drum, S. N., Hayward, R., & Schneider, C. M. (2003). A case study: Prescriptive exercise intervention after bilateral mastectomies. Integrative Cancer Therapies, 2(1), 34–38. https://doi.org/10.1177/1534735403251168

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