| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
experiencelifemag.com
Print › | Back ›
Living Strong With Cancer
When an otherwise healthy, fit person who has “done everything
right” receives a cancer diagnosis, it can feel unfair on many levels.
Still, experts say, don’t ditch your healthy habits now - they may
be some of your strongest allies in recovery.
By Catherine Guthrie |
November 2007 |
Support Yourself
Maintain Your Edge
Nourish Your Body
Spare Your Muscles
Amplify Antioxidants
Healthy Tips for
Living Strong With Cancer
Anna Schwartz, 44, is a natural athlete. As a nursing student, she competed
in tennis, swimming and running. The only time she remembers hitting the brakes
was 19 years ago, when, at the age of 24, she learned she had non-Hodgkin’s
lymphoma, a cancer of the immune system, and her doctor told her to stop exercising.
In many ways, his edict was worse than the treatment itself, she says. “I
got fat, depressed and hopelessly out of shape.”
While still undergoing cancer treatments, Schwartz graduated from nursing school
and landed a job working with cancer patients. She soon noticed that people
who exercised, even if it was just pacing around their hospital rooms, did better
physically and mentally than those who stayed in bed.
Bucking conventional wisdom, Schwartz started cycling, and, she says, “The
effect was amazing.” Within days, her depression began to lift; within
weeks, her athletic build started to reappear; and within a year, she completed
a 15-day transcontinental bike ride. She soon traded her nurse’s uniform
for a PhD in nursing and set her sights on researching the effects of exercise
on cancer.
In the years since, she has set two world records in cycling and penned Cancer
Fitness: Exercise Programs for Patients and Survivors (Fireside,
2004). Today, she credits exercise with saving her life: “I was at the
depths of despair, and exercise pulled me through.”
A cancer diagnosis is a life-altering blow for anyone, but for people who’ve
dedicated themselves to years of exercise and eating right, the news can feel
like a bodily betrayal. If you find yourself among the 1.4 million Americans
slapped with a cancer diagnosis this year, your first impulse may be to post
your athletic gear on Craigslist and curl up in bed with a pint of Ben & Jerry’s
Chubby Hubby. Until recently, a lot of well-meaning doctors probably would have
encouraged that approach, because many believed that cancer patients were too
fragile to bother with exercise.
That laissez-faire attitude also dominated when it came to diet, says Dave Grotto,
RD, an expert in cancer and nutrition and a spokes person for the American Dietetic
Association. “Doctors would tell cancer patients, ‘Eat whatever
you want now, and we’ll worry about it later.’ It was very shortsighte d
advice.”
In retrospect, the advice was also just plain wrong, at least according to a
batch of new studies pioneered by researchers like Schwartz who’ve suspected
all along that the fight against cancer is not most effectively won curled up
with your favorite comfort food.
Clearly, every cancer case — and every individual — is different,
so it’s important to follow your own instincts and the advice of the health
professionals whom you most trust. But if you’re an otherwise healthy
person living with cancer, these experts suggest you’d be best off putting
down the ice cream, renewing your gym membership, and finding out what the latest
science says about how tweaking your diet and staying on your feet can help
you beat the “Big C.”
Support
Yourself
“Exercise is one of the most important things a cancer patient can do
to complement mainstream treatment,” says Barrie Cassileth, PhD, chief
of integrative medicine services at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center
in New York City. Her declaration is a far cry from the advice doled out just
a decade ago, but experts are seeing eye-popping gains when cancer patients
lace up their gym shoes.
Some of the most promising data yet on exercise and cancer appeared in the June
2007 issue of the Journal of Clinical Oncology. A prospective
study followed nearly 1,500 early-stage breast cancer survivors for up to 11
years and found that those who ate a healthy diet and were physically active
(the equivalent of walking at a moderate pace 30 minutes a day, six days a week),
cut their chances of dying from the disease by 50 percent.
That’s the kind of stat that turns heads in the medical community. Says
Cassileth, “Aside from a minor surgery to remove a small skin cancer [which
greatly reduces the risk of dying from the disease], nothing has produced that
kind of [life-saving] result.”
So that’s all well and good for cancer caught in its earliest, most-curable
stage, but what if your cancer is more advanced? Although there is a gap in
the data on exercise and sicker patients, once again, working out does appear
to pay off.
When scientists at the University of Rochester and the University of Michigan
recruited women with metastatic breast cancer for an exercise study, they knew
they were breaking new ground. No researcher had ever sent people who’d
wrestled with advanced cancer to the gym. So the researchers kept the group
small, just 12 women, and limited the study to eight weeks. With caveats in
place, the rest of the study safely pushed the women’s limits. Each thrice-weekly
60-minute workout combined aerobic activity, resistance training, and core-stability
and flexibility exercises. At the study’s end, the numbers spoke for themselves:
The women had upped their flexibility 100 percent, increased their balance by
30 percent and showed a 34 percent drop in cancer-related fatigue. Doctors may
not be ready to prescribe weight training to people with advanced cancer, says
Karen Mustian, PhD, the study’s lead author, but they are realizing that
fitter patients are healthier patients.
The same goes for people who are fit at the time of diagnosis. While any time
is a good time to start exercising, people with cancer who are fit from the
get-go may have an edge over those who aren’t. That’s because the
more muscle you have at the start, the longer it takes for it to melt away.
In her research, Schwartz has found that people who are not active during cancer
treatment tend to lose more of their “functional ability” (for example,
the ability to do simple things like climb stairs and go grocery shopping).
Those who do exercise remain stronger and more able to cover more ground faster.
Of course, none of this is to say that you should drag yourself to the gym or
running path when you’re feeling lousy or your body is screaming to stay
in bed. Schwartz emphasizes that answers to common questions, such as when and
how much to exercise, will vary widely from person to person. The best thing
to do, she says, is to let your body be your guide.
“Usually you’re pretty tired two to three days after chemotherapy,
so you’ll want to reduce the intensity of your workout,” she says.
“Once you’re feeling more energized, you can ramp it back up.”
Maintain
Your Edge
One reason to exercise is to combat “wasting syndrome” (a.k.a. cachexia)
— a huge health threat to people with cancer, especially of the lung,
pancreas and gastrointestinal tract. Indeed, cachexia, which causes weakness
and the loss of weight, fat and muscle, is a direct cause of death for as many
as 40 percent of cancer patients, according to the National Cancer Institute.
“As soon as patients get deconditioned, they rest more; pretty soon they
spend more time in bed, and eventually their quality of life suffers,”
says Lee Jones, PhD, a cancer researcher with the Duke University Medical Center
in Durham, N.C. “People who are fitter to begin with will naturally do
better; that’s why, if you were active beforehand, you should keep it
up if you can.”
Mustian, at the University of Rochester, likens regular exercise to putting
funds aside for a rainy day: “It doesn’t matter what brings the
rain, whether it’s cancer, fibromyalgia or multiple sclerosis,”
she says. “The more physically fit you are, the better you’ll do
when facing a serious illness.”
Interestingly, the growing stack of studies extolling the virtues of exercise
for people with cancer hasn’t entirely explained whyit’s
so beneficial. Cheryl Rock, PhD, a professor in the cancer prevention and control
program at the University of California, San Diego’s Medical Center, points
to three of the most plausible explanations.
For starters, exercise lowers some of the blood’s hormone levels, which
is important because higher hormone levels act like fuel on the fire of certain
cancers, such as those of the breast and maybe even colon. Exercise also slows
the body’s ability to make substances that stimulate cell growth. That’s
a good thing because cells reproducing willy-nilly can be cancerous. Finally,
exercise lowers the body’s output of insulin, a hormone that can also
goose cells into unwieldy reproduction. (See “How
Exercise Heals.")
When it comes to living with cancer, much is uncertain, but one thing is a sure
bet: Exercise is only one piece of the puzzle — another is nutrition.
Says Rock, “You can’t just rest on one lifestyle behavior.”
Nourish
Your Body
When Tim Jensen, a husband and father of two in Minneapolis, learned that he,
too, had non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, he was shocked. Like Schwartz, he’d
always been active, and, at 43, his first reaction was “Where did I go
wrong?” “I thought people with cancer had done something to compromise
their systems,” he says.
“I thought ‘Wow, I have cancer, and I’m a healthy guy. I must
be the healthiest unhealthy person I know.’”
Although Jensen, now 45, had always been active, he’d never given much
thought to his diet. “I ate everything and anything I could get my hands
on,” he says with a chuckle. Postdiagnosis, Jensen shifted his approach
and began making healthier choices.
Smart move, note the experts, who say we now know that eating a diet heavy on
whole foods and light on processed fare is not only one of the best ways to
arm yourself againstcancer, it’s also a means of
supporting the body through treatment as it helps to minimize side effects.
Good nutrition and carefully selected supplements can make conventional cancer
treatments more effective and lower the level of toxins accumulating in the
body during chemotherapy and radiation, says Keith Block, MD, cofounder and
medical director of the Block Center for Integrative Cancer Treatment in Evanston,
Ill. “The right diet is a critical component of care for someone who has
cancer.”
After his diagnosis, Jensen gave up fast food, traded his nightly beer for a
glass of red wine to boost his antioxidant intake, and gave up dairy foods (on
the sheer chance it might help). The whole family switched to eating more organic
produce, fish and free-range chicken. “In many ways,” he says, “I
feel healthier now than I did before.”
Like most conventional nutritionists, cancer researcher Jones recommends that
people with cancer stick to the “old” Food Guide Pyramid. That means
striving daily for five to nine servings of fruits and vegetables; six to eight
servings of whole grains; two to three servings of lean meats or vegetarian
sources of protein, like beans and nuts; and limiting fat to 30 percent of daily
calories.
Other cancer experts, however, see things differently. Many, for example, are
keener on emphasizing produce. Since plant substances, called phytochemicals,
can help the body knock cancer to its knees, Block asks his patients to down
10 to 12 daily servings of fruits and vegetables. (For more on the benefits
and sources of phytochemicals, see “Phyto
Power" in this issue.) That can feel like a whole produce aisle,
he acknowledges, so he suggests supplementing with what he calls “green
superfoods” — drinks made from concentrated forms of antioxidant-rich
vegetables, such as cabbage, broccoli, leeks, red and yellow peppers, and tomatoes.
In helping patients select their juices, Block encourages using organic vegetables
that are free of contaminants and have measurable antioxidant activity.
Spare
Your Muscles
Cancer patients should also prioritize protein. Grotto says protein is the No.
1 nutrient that people with cancer need, because many types of cancer, including
colon, lung, kidney and liver, rob the body of lean tissue. Once muscle stores
are depleted, the body will leach protein from the organs, which can further
zap strength and undermine the immune system, which is headquartered in one
of the body’s largest organs, the small intestine.
One of the easiest proteins for the body to digest is whey, a concentrated version
of a protein found in milk. Whey protein is called “tissue sparing,”
says Block, because it spares the tissue from further breakdown. “Many
professional athletes use whey because it helps muscles recover and rebuild
after a tough workout.”
Cancer can be caused by chronic inflammation, so it’s important to make
dietary choices that won’t fuel the flames, says Block. Protein sources
such as cheese, skin-on poultry and red meat contain pro-inflammatory fats —
saturated and omega-6s, for instance — providing an environment that supports
inflammatory conditions. They should be eliminated, Block says, or at least
kept to a minimum.
On the flip side, healthier protein sources (salmon, flaxseed and walnuts) contain
monounsaturated and omega-3 fats, which counter inflammation and may even help
cancer patients stave off muscle wasting.
Bottom line? Limit the amount of animal protein in your diet. A 2005 study in
the Journal of the American Medical Association found
that people who ate the most red meat (2 to 3 ounces or more a day, depending
on gender) were up to 40 percent more likely to develop colon cancer. It also
showed that people who consumed the most processed meat (an ounce five to six
times a week for men, two to three times for women) were 50 percent more likely
to develop colon cancer and 20 percent more likely to get rectal cancer than
people who indulged the least.
And there’s one more twist. Protein won’t get from the stomach to
the muscles without a little help. Without exercise, the body won’t use
the protein, says Jones. “You can take in lots of it, but the muscles
won’t use it unless they need to.” So make sure you’re giving
your body a reason to absorb what you’re feeding it.
Amplify
Antioxidants
Next on the list of dietary must-haves are antioxidants. The body’s natural
cancer fighters, antioxidants destroy free radicals, which are cellular vandals
that tag the DNA of healthy cells and make them abnormal. With multiple hits,
this can lead to out-of-control growth and proliferation, and potentially become
cancerous. If you already have cancer, free radicals can drive it to become
more aggressive. “Using lymph and blood vessels,” Block says, “tumor
cells can travel and seed new locations — a process known as metastasis.”
The same substances that give fruits and vegetables their vivid hues, antioxidants
patrol the bloodstream, putting the kibosh on free radicals before they can
run amok. Remember the study of early-stage breast cancer patients who cut their
risk of dying from the disease by 50 percent with diet and exercise? The women
who fared best also spooned up at least five servings of fruits and vegetables
each day.
“There’s not a lot about cancer you can control, including genetics,”
says Rock, a coauthor of the study. “But we do know that by eating a diet
high in fruits and vegetables, you can improve your prognosis.”
While antioxidants in whole foods help destroy the free radicals that can cause
cancer, the benefits of antioxidant supplements are much less certain. Taken
by as many as 87 percent of people with cancer, antioxidant supplements are
highly controversial. Some experts worry that high-dose vitamins can monkey
with chemotherapy treatment and, even worse, make cancer cells more powerful.
“Americans tend to think if one vitamin is good, then 10 vitamins are
better,” says Cassileth. “But it just isn’t the case.”
With cancer, as with most things, moderation has real merit. That’s why
combining sensible nutrition and exercise with essential healthy-lifestyle habits,
such as stress relief and getting enough sleep and emotional support, may be
the very best way to stay strong both during treatment and beyond.
For inspiration, consider Tim Jensen: In the two years since starting his cancer
treatment and changing his diet for the better, he has completed five triathlons.
His message to people living with cancer? “Grab life by the horns, embrace
every day as an adventure, and fight the battle to win.”
Catherine Guthrie is a Bloomington, Ind.–based writer.
Healthy
Tips for Living Strong With Cancer (Back
to Top)
1. Talk with your doctor about your exercise goals. She
may want to monitor you more closely for lower-than-normal levels of blood cells.
Too few white blood cells, red blood cells and platelets (blood-clotting cells)
can increase your risk of anemia, infection and bleeding. None of these is dangerous,
per se, but you may want to take extra precautions, such as avoiding activities
that could lead to falling (and, hence, bleeding).
2. Meet with a physical therapist or exercise physiologist,
at least for a few sessions. Most personal trainers don’t have the background
to tailor workouts to the needs of cancer patients without some outside advice,
says Anna Schwartz, PhD, a professor who holds the Scottsdale Healthcare Center
research-endowed chair at Arizona State University. A physical therapist or
exercise physiologist can show you (and your trainer) how to work safely and
systematically around any physical limitations you may be facing.
3. Start slowly, says Schwartz. If you’ve been sedentary,
build gradually; 10 minutes of walking every other day may be enough. Gung-ho
exercisers should curtail workouts by 50 percent at the start of treatment.
Then add time and intensity once you know how your body reacts to it, she says.
4. If you have to choose just one type of exercise, make
it aerobic, says Schwartz. “If we lose our aerobic fitness, we can’t
do things that are meaningful in life, like go for a walk or play with our kids.”
So if you’re short on energy, consider a low-key swim, bike ride or walk.
An active yoga class or interval-training circuit can get your blood pumping,
too.
5. Keep track. Maintain an exercise log and record what
you did, when you did it, how long you lasted, how hard you pushed, and how
you felt during and afterward, says Schwartz. You’ll get a sense of accomplishment
from seeing the log grow, plus you can show it to your physician as an accurate
picture of your activities.
6. Know your limits. This isn’t a “no pain,
no gain” scenario. If you’re feeling pummeled by chemotherapy side
effects, such as nausea, fever, dizziness or shortness of breath, says Schwartz,
by all means give yourself some time off. Recovery is your priority.
7. Stay hydrated. Cancer treatments can snuff out the body’s
thirst signals, says Dave Grotto, RD, an expert on cancer and nutrition. Drink
8 to 12 cups of liquid a day. Water, fresh juices, green tea and clear broth
are all good choices. If you need to pack on the pounds, consider smoothies
(see No. 8), kefir or even milk shakes. Different cancers and cancer treatments
affect individual metabolisms differently, so check with your physician.
8. Maximize nutrients. Get the most nutritional bang for
your buck by slurping on what Grotto calls “powerhouse fruit smoothies.”
Add whey protein to milk (or a dairy-free substitute), and add antioxidants
by reaching for deep-hued fruit, such as blueberries, blackberries or strawberries.
9. Pop a daily multivitamin. Chemo-therapy depletes the
body’s vitamin and mineral reserves. Look for multis with the full recommended
dietary allowances of B vitamins, vitamin C and vitamin A, says Grotto. “These
vitamins are the biggies that chemotherapy and radiation deplete.”
10. Live clean. People with cancer can be extra sensitive
to toxins and irritants, so reduce your exposure to problematic chemicals by
choosing organic produce and personal-care products when possible.
11. Take aim at inflammation. When you eat foods chock-full
of sugar and bad fats, blood-sugar levels spike and the body’s internal
environment becomes more inflamed, which can fuel certain cancers. Help your
body defend itself against the disease by avoiding pro-inflammatory foods, such
as sugar, high-fructose corn syrup, hydrogenated oils, white flour, red meats
and processed-meat products (bacon, bologna, salami, etc.).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Living Strong With Cancer
When an otherwise healthy, fit person who has “done everything
right” receives a cancer diagnosis, it can feel unfair on many levels.
Still, experts say, don’t ditch your healthy habits now - they may
be some of your strongest allies in recovery.
By Catherine Guthrie | Features, November 2007 |
Support Yourself
Maintain Your Edge
Nourish Your Body
Spare Your Muscles
Amplify Antioxidants
Healthy Tips for
Living Strong With Cancer
Anna Schwartz, 44, is a natural athlete. As a nursing student, she competed
in tennis, swimming and running. The only time she remembers hitting the brakes
was 19 years ago, when, at the age of 24, she learned she had non-Hodgkin’s
lymphoma, a cancer of the immune system, and her doctor told her to stop exercising.
In many ways, his edict was worse than the treatment itself, she says. “I
got fat, depressed and hopelessly out of shape.”
While still undergoing cancer treatments, Schwartz graduated from nursing school
and landed a job working with cancer patients. She soon noticed that people
who exercised, even if it was just pacing around their hospital rooms, did better
physically and mentally than those who stayed in bed.
Bucking conventional wisdom, Schwartz started cycling, and, she says, “The
effect was amazing.” Within days, her depression began to lift; within
weeks, her athletic build started to reappear; and within a year, she completed
a 15-day transcontinental bike ride. She soon traded her nurse’s uniform
for a PhD in nursing and set her sights on researching the effects of exercise
on cancer.
In the years since, she has set two world records in cycling and penned Cancer
Fitness: Exercise Programs for Patients and Survivors (Fireside,
2004). Today, she credits exercise with saving her life: “I was at the
depths of despair, and exercise pulled me through.”
A cancer diagnosis is a life-altering blow for anyone, but for people who’ve
dedicated themselves to years of exercise and eating right, the news can feel
like a bodily betrayal. If you find yourself among the 1.4 million Americans
slapped with a cancer diagnosis this year, your first impulse may be to post
your athletic gear on Craigslist and curl up in bed with a pint of Ben & Jerry’s
Chubby Hubby. Until recently, a lot of well-meaning doctors probably would have
encouraged that approach, because many believed that cancer patients were too
fragile to bother with exercise.
That laissez-faire attitude also dominated when it came to diet, says Dave Grotto,
RD, an expert in cancer and nutrition and a spokes person for the American Dietetic
Association. “Doctors would tell cancer patients, ‘Eat whatever
you want now, and we’ll worry about it later.’ It was very shortsighte d
advice.”
In retrospect, the advice was also just plain wrong, at least according to a
batch of new studies pioneered by researchers like Schwartz who’ve suspected
all along that the fight against cancer is not most effectively won curled up
with your favorite comfort food.
Clearly, every cancer case — and every individual — is different,
so it’s important to follow your own instincts and the advice of the health
professionals whom you most trust. But if you’re an otherwise healthy
person living with cancer, these experts suggest you’d be best off putting
down the ice cream, renewing your gym membership, and finding out what the latest
science says about how tweaking your diet and staying on your feet can help
you beat the “Big C.”
Support
Yourself (Back to Top)
“Exercise is one of the most important things a cancer patient can do
to complement mainstream treatment,” says Barrie Cassileth, PhD, chief
of integrative medicine services at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center
in New York City. Her declaration is a far cry from the advice doled out just
a decade ago, but experts are seeing eye-popping gains when cancer patients
lace up their gym shoes.
Some of the most promising data yet on exercise and cancer appeared in the June
2007 issue of the Journal of Clinical Oncology. A prospective
study followed nearly 1,500 early-stage breast cancer survivors for up to 11
years and found that those who ate a healthy diet and were physically active
(the equivalent of walking at a moderate pace 30 minutes a day, six days a week),
cut their chances of dying from the disease by 50 percent.
That’s the kind of stat that turns heads in the medical community. Says
Cassileth, “Aside from a minor surgery to remove a small skin cancer [which
greatly reduces the risk of dying from the disease], nothing has produced that
kind of [life-saving] result.”
So that’s all well and good for cancer caught in its earliest, most-curable
stage, but what if your cancer is more advanced? Although there is a gap in
the data on exercise and sicker patients, once again, working out does appear
to pay off.
When scientists at the University of Rochester and the University of Michigan
recruited women with metastatic breast cancer for an exercise study, they knew
they were breaking new ground. No researcher had ever sent people who’d
wrestled with advanced cancer to the gym. So the researchers kept the group
small, just 12 women, and limited the study to eight weeks. With caveats in
place, the rest of the study safely pushed the women’s limits. Each thrice-weekly
60-minute workout combined aerobic activity, resistance training, and core-stability
and flexibility exercises. At the study’s end, the numbers spoke for themselves:
The women had upped their flexibility 100 percent, increased their balance by
30 percent and showed a 34 percent drop in cancer-related fatigue. Doctors may
not be ready to prescribe weight training to people with advanced cancer, says
Karen Mustian, PhD, the study’s lead author, but they are realizing that
fitter patients are healthier patients.
The same goes for people who are fit at the time of diagnosis. While any time
is a good time to start exercising, people with cancer who are fit from the
get-go may have an edge over those who aren’t. That’s because the
more muscle you have at the start, the longer it takes for it to melt away.
In her research, Schwartz has found that people who are not active during cancer
treatment tend to lose more of their “functional ability” (for example,
the ability to do simple things like climb stairs and go grocery shopping).
Those who do exercise remain stronger and more able to cover more ground faster.
Of course, none of this is to say that you should drag yourself to the gym or
running path when you’re feeling lousy or your body is screaming to stay
in bed. Schwartz emphasizes that answers to common questions, such as when and
how much to exercise, will vary widely from person to person. The best thing
to do, she says, is to let your body be your guide.
“Usually you’re pretty tired two to three days after chemotherapy,
so you’ll want to reduce the intensity of your workout,” she says.
“Once you’re feeling more energized, you can ramp it back up.”
Maintain
Your Edge (Back to Top)
One reason to exercise is to combat “wasting syndrome” (a.k.a. cachexia)
— a huge health threat to people with cancer, especially of the lung,
pancreas and gastrointestinal tract. Indeed, cachexia, which causes weakness
and the loss of weight, fat and muscle, is a direct cause of death for as many
as 40 percent of cancer patients, according to the National Cancer Institute.
“As soon as patients get deconditioned, they rest more; pretty soon they
spend more time in bed, and eventually their quality of life suffers,”
says Lee Jones, PhD, a cancer researcher with the Duke University Medical Center
in Durham, N.C. “People who are fitter to begin with will naturally do
better; that’s why, if you were active beforehand, you should keep it
up if you can.”
Mustian, at the University of Rochester, likens regular exercise to putting
funds aside for a rainy day: “It doesn’t matter what brings the
rain, whether it’s cancer, fibromyalgia or multiple sclerosis,”
she says. “The more physically fit you are, the better you’ll do
when facing a serious illness.”
Interestingly, the growing stack of studies extolling the virtues of exercise
for people with cancer hasn’t entirely explained whyit’s
so beneficial. Cheryl Rock, PhD, a professor in the cancer prevention and control
program at the University of California, San Diego’s Medical Center, points
to three of the most plausible explanations.
For starters, exercise lowers some of the blood’s hormone levels, which
is important because higher hormone levels act like fuel on the fire of certain
cancers, such as those of the breast and maybe even colon. Exercise also slows
the body’s ability to make substances that stimulate cell growth. That’s
a good thing because cells reproducing willy-nilly can be cancerous. Finally,
exercise lowers the body’s output of insulin, a hormone that can also
goose cells into unwieldy reproduction. (See “How
Exercise Heals.")
When it comes to living with cancer, much is uncertain, but one thing is a sure
bet: Exercise is only one piece of the puzzle — another is nutrition.
Says Rock, “You can’t just rest on one lifestyle behavior.”
Nourish
Your Body (Back to Top)
When Tim Jensen, a husband and father of two in Minneapolis, learned that he,
too, had non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, he was shocked. Like Schwartz, he’d
always been active, and, at 43, his first reaction was “Where did I go
wrong?” “I thought people with cancer had done something to compromise
their systems,” he says.
“I thought ‘Wow, I have cancer, and I’m a healthy guy. I must
be the healthiest unhealthy person I know.’”
Although Jensen, now 45, had always been active, he’d never given much
thought to his diet. “I ate everything and anything I could get my hands
on,” he says with a chuckle. Postdiagnosis, Jensen shifted his approach
and began making healthier choices.
Smart move, note the experts, who say we now know that eating a diet heavy on
whole foods and light on processed fare is not only one of the best ways to
arm yourself againstcancer, it’s also a means of
supporting the body through treatment as it helps to minimize side effects.
Good nutrition and carefully selected supplements can make conventional cancer
treatments more effective and lower the level of toxins accumulating in the
body during chemotherapy and radiation, says Keith Block, MD, cofounder and
medical director of the Block Center for Integrative Cancer Treatment in Evanston,
Ill. “The right diet is a critical component of care for someone who has
cancer.”
After his diagnosis, Jensen gave up fast food, traded his nightly beer for a
glass of red wine to boost his antioxidant intake, and gave up dairy foods (on
the sheer chance it might help). The whole family switched to eating more organic
produce, fish and free-range chicken. “In many ways,” he says, “I
feel healthier now than I did before.”
Like most conventional nutritionists, cancer researcher Jones recommends that
people with cancer stick to the “old” Food Guide Pyramid. That means
striving daily for five to nine servings of fruits and vegetables; six to eight
servings of whole grains; two to three servings of lean meats or vegetarian
sources of protein, like beans and nuts; and limiting fat to 30 percent of daily
calories.
Other cancer experts, however, see things differently. Many, for example, are
keener on emphasizing produce. Since plant substances, called phytochemicals,
can help the body knock cancer to its knees, Block asks his patients to down
10 to 12 daily servings of fruits and vegetables. (For more on the benefits
and sources of phytochemicals, see “Phyto
Power" in this issue.) That can feel like a whole produce aisle,
he acknowledges, so he suggests supplementing with what he calls “green
superfoods” — drinks made from concentrated forms of antioxidant-rich
vegetables, such as cabbage, broccoli, leeks, red and yellow peppers, and tomatoes.
In helping patients select their juices, Block encourages using organic vegetables
that are free of contaminants and have measurable antioxidant activity.
Spare
Your Muscles (Back to Top)
Cancer patients should also prioritize protein. Grotto says protein is the No.
1 nutrient that people with cancer need, because many types of cancer, including
colon, lung, kidney and liver, rob the body of lean tissue. Once muscle stores
are depleted, the body will leach protein from the organs, which can further
zap strength and undermine the immune system, which is headquartered in one
of the body’s largest organs, the small intestine.
One of the easiest proteins for the body to digest is whey, a concentrated version
of a protein found in milk. Whey protein is called “tissue sparing,”
says Block, because it spares the tissue from further breakdown. “Many
professional athletes use whey because it helps muscles recover and rebuild
after a tough workout.”
Cancer can be caused by chronic inflammation, so it’s important to make
dietary choices that won’t fuel the flames, says Block. Protein sources
such as cheese, skin-on poultry and red meat contain pro-inflammatory fats —
saturated and omega-6s, for instance — providing an environment that supports
inflammatory conditions. They should be eliminated, Block says, or at least
kept to a minimum.
On the flip side, healthier protein sources (salmon, flaxseed and walnuts) contain
monounsaturated and omega-3 fats, which counter inflammation and may even help
cancer patients stave off muscle wasting.
Bottom line? Limit the amount of animal protein in your diet. A 2005 study in
the Journal of the American Medical Association found
that people who ate the most red meat (2 to 3 ounces or more a day, depending
on gender) were up to 40 percent more likely to develop colon cancer. It also
showed that people who consumed the most processed meat (an ounce five to six
times a week for men, two to three times for women) were 50 percent more likely
to develop colon cancer and 20 percent more likely to get rectal cancer than
people who indulged the least.
And there’s one more twist. Protein won’t get from the stomach to
the muscles without a little help. Without exercise, the body won’t use
the protein, says Jones. “You can take in lots of it, but the muscles
won’t use it unless they need to.” So make sure you’re giving
your body a reason to absorb what you’re feeding it.
Amplify
Antioxidants (Back to Top)
Next on the list of dietary must-haves are antioxidants. The body’s natural
cancer fighters, antioxidants destroy free radicals, which are cellular vandals
that tag the DNA of healthy cells and make them abnormal. With multiple hits,
this can lead to out-of-control growth and proliferation, and potentially become
cancerous. If you already have cancer, free radicals can drive it to become
more aggressive. “Using lymph and blood vessels,” Block says, “tumor
cells can travel and seed new locations — a process known as metastasis.”
The same substances that give fruits and vegetables their vivid hues, antioxidants
patrol the bloodstream, putting the kibosh on free radicals before they can
run amok. Remember the study of early-stage breast cancer patients who cut their
risk of dying from the disease by 50 percent with diet and exercise? The women
who fared best also spooned up at least five servings of fruits and vegetables
each day.
“There’s not a lot about cancer you can control, including genetics,”
says Rock, a coauthor of the study. “But we do know that by eating a diet
high in fruits and vegetables, you can improve your prognosis.”
While antioxidants in whole foods help destroy the free radicals that can cause
cancer, the benefits of antioxidant supplements are much less certain. Taken
by as many as 87 percent of people with cancer, antioxidant supplements are
highly controversial. Some experts worry that high-dose vitamins can monkey
with chemotherapy treatment and, even worse, make cancer cells more powerful.
“Americans tend to think if one vitamin is good, then 10 vitamins are
better,” says Cassileth. “But it just isn’t the case.”
With cancer, as with most things, moderation has real merit. That’s why
combining sensible nutrition and exercise with essential healthy-lifestyle habits,
such as stress relief and getting enough sleep and emotional support, may be
the very best way to stay strong both during treatment and beyond.
For inspiration, consider Tim Jensen: In the two years since starting his cancer
treatment and changing his diet for the better, he has completed five triathlons.
His message to people living with cancer? “Grab life by the horns, embrace
every day as an adventure, and fight the battle to win.”
Catherine Guthrie is a Bloomington, Ind.–based writer.
Healthy
Tips for Living Strong With Cancer (Back
to Top)
1. Talk with your doctor about your exercise goals. She
may want to monitor you more closely for lower-than-normal levels of blood cells.
Too few white blood cells, red blood cells and platelets (blood-clotting cells)
can increase your risk of anemia, infection and bleeding. None of these is dangerous,
per se, but you may want to take extra precautions, such as avoiding activities
that could lead to falling (and, hence, bleeding).
2. Meet with a physical therapist or exercise physiologist,
at least for a few sessions. Most personal trainers don’t have the background
to tailor workouts to the needs of cancer patients without some outside advice,
says Anna Schwartz, PhD, a professor who holds the Scottsdale Healthcare Center
research-endowed chair at Arizona State University. A physical therapist or
exercise physiologist can show you (and your trainer) how to work safely and
systematically around any physical limitations you may be facing.
3. Start slowly, says Schwartz. If you’ve been sedentary,
build gradually; 10 minutes of walking every other day may be enough. Gung-ho
exercisers should curtail workouts by 50 percent at the start of treatment.
Then add time and intensity once you know how your body reacts to it, she says.
4. If you have to choose just one type of exercise, make
it aerobic, says Schwartz. “If we lose our aerobic fitness, we can’t
do things that are meaningful in life, like go for a walk or play with our kids.”
So if you’re short on energy, consider a low-key swim, bike ride or walk.
An active yoga class or interval-training circuit can get your blood pumping,
too.
5. Keep track. Maintain an exercise log and record what
you did, when you did it, how long you lasted, how hard you pushed, and how
you felt during and afterward, says Schwartz. You’ll get a sense of accomplishment
from seeing the log grow, plus you can show it to your physician as an accurate
picture of your activities.
6. Know your limits. This isn’t a “no pain,
no gain” scenario. If you’re feeling pummeled by chemotherapy side
effects, such as nausea, fever, dizziness or shortness of breath, says Schwartz,
by all means give yourself some time off. Recovery is your priority.
7. Stay hydrated. Cancer treatments can snuff out the body’s
thirst signals, says Dave Grotto, RD, an expert on cancer and nutrition. Drink
8 to 12 cups of liquid a day. Water, fresh juices, green tea and clear broth
are all good choices. If you need to pack on the pounds, consider smoothies
(see No. 8), kefir or even milk shakes. Different cancers and cancer treatments
affect individual metabolisms differently, so check with your physician.
8. Maximize nutrients. Get the most nutritional bang for
your buck by slurping on what Grotto calls “powerhouse fruit smoothies.”
Add whey protein to milk (or a dairy-free substitute), and add antioxidants
by reaching for deep-hued fruit, such as blueberries, blackberries or strawberries.
9. Pop a daily multivitamin. Chemo-therapy depletes the
body’s vitamin and mineral reserves. Look for multis with the full recommended
dietary allowances of B vitamins, vitamin C and vitamin A, says Grotto. “These
vitamins are the biggies that chemotherapy and radiation deplete.”
10. Live clean. People with cancer can be extra sensitive
to toxins and irritants, so reduce your exposure to problematic chemicals by
choosing organic produce and personal-care products when possible.
11. Take aim at inflammation. When you eat foods chock-full
of sugar and bad fats, blood-sugar levels spike and the body’s internal
environment becomes more inflamed, which can fuel certain cancers. Help your
body defend itself against the disease by avoiding pro-inflammatory foods, such
as sugar, high-fructose corn syrup, hydrogenated oils, white flour, red meats
and processed-meat products (bacon, bologna, salami, etc.).
Print
| Email
| Comment
| Subscribe
| Give a Gift
| Read Comments
|
|
January 24, 2008
Pat says:
When I received my first issue of Experience Life magazine, which was "Let the Healing Begin," I read through it and was impressed. But since I did not have cancer, I did not read the healing articles. To my surprise, I was diagnosed with breast cancer a week later. Your magazine helped me in some of my very down moments to stay focused on the future and set goals to get back on a healthy lifestyle (tailored around my chemo at first and looking to life after cancer). I want to thank you for bringing attention to something as large as cancer. By doing this, a cure is a little closer. Until it affects you or someone close to you, you skip over the details, like I had. But sad to say, it will affect most everyone in a very personal way. We must support cancer organizations and stop this killer.