Higher-intensity exercise results in more sustainable improvements for VO2peak for breast and prostate cancer survivors


Autoria(s): Martin, Eric A.; Battaglini, Claudio L.; Hands, Beth; Naumann, Fiona
Data(s)

01/05/2015

Resumo

Purpose/Objectives: To examine peak volume of oxygen consumption (VO2peak) changes after a high- or low-intensity exercise intervention.
 Design: Experimental trial comparing two randomized intervention groups with control. 
 Setting: An exercise clinic at a university in Australia.
 Sample: 87 prostate cancer survivors (aged 47–80 years) and 72 breast cancer survivors (aged 34–76 years).
 Methods: Participants enrolled in an eight-week exercise intervention (n = 84) or control (n = 75) group. Intervention participants were randomized to low-intensity (n = 44, 60%–65% VO2peak, 50%–65% of one repetition maximum [1RM]) or high-intensity (n = 40, 75%–80% VO2peak, 65%–80% 1RM) exercise groups. Participants in the control group continued usual routines. All participants were assessed at weeks 1 and 10. The intervention groups were reassessed four months postintervention for sustainability. 
 Main Research Variables: VO2peak and self-reported physical activity.
 Findings: Intervention groups improved VO2peak similarly (p = 0.083), and both more than controls (p < 0.001). The high-intensity group maintained VO2peak at follow-up, whereas the low-intensity group regressed (p = 0.021). The low-intensity group minimally changed from baseline to follow-up by 0.5 ml/kg per minute, whereas the high-intensity group significantly improved by 2.2 ml/kg per minute (p = 0.01). Intervention groups always reported similar physical activity levels. 
 Conclusions: Higher-intensity exercise provided more sustainable cardiorespiratory benefits than lower-intensity exercise.
 Implications for Nursing: Survivors need guidance on exercise intensity, because a high volume of low-intensity exercise may not provide sustained health benefits.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/83960/

Publicador

Oncology Nursing Society

Relação

https://onf.ons.org/onf/42/3/higher-intensity-exercise-results-more-sustainable-improvements-vo2peak-breast-and-prostate

DOI:10.1188/15.ONF.42-03AP

Martin, Eric A., Battaglini, Claudio L., Hands, Beth, & Naumann, Fiona (2015) Higher-intensity exercise results in more sustainable improvements for VO2peak for breast and prostate cancer survivors. Oncology Nursing Forum, 42(3), pp. 241-249.

Direitos

Copyright 2015 Oncology Nursing Society (ONS)

Fonte

Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation; School of Exercise & Nutrition Sciences

Palavras-Chave #110602 Exercise Physiology #high intensity exercise #breast cancer #prostate cancer #VO2peak #exercise oncology; cardiorespiratory exercise test; aerobic exercise; breast neoplasms; prostate neoplasms
Tipo

Journal Article