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Exercise
preserves Freedom of Movement after Breast
Cancer Surgery
By Milly Dawson, Contributing Writer
Health Behavior News Service
June 21, 2010--An active 72-year-old woman, Claire Mitchell
had always enjoyed cooking. However, after
breast cancer surgery she found that she had
less freedom of movement and reaching jars
on high shelves became quite painful. Her
plight is common.
A new Cochrane review finds that exercise
programs help patients recover shoulder
movement and minimize loss of arm or
shoulder function after breast cancer
surgery.
Many breast cancer survivors develop pain,
shoulder stiffness and arm swelling after
treatment. These problems often persist for
years. Physicians usually prescribe arm and
shoulder exercises after surgery to prevent
pain and stiffness in those areas on the
side of the cancer. However, the best type
of exercise or how soon it should begin have
been debated.
“There has been some concern that too much aggressive
movement soon after surgery might cause
pain, delay healing, and increase the risk
of arm swelling,” said lead review author
Margaret McNeely, an assistant professor of
physical therapy at the University of
Alberta and clinical researcher at the Cross
Cancer Institute, in Canada.
McNeely’s team examined 24 research studies
comprising 2,132 women with a confirmed
breast cancer diagnosis and who had
undergone surgery such as a radical
mastectomy, modified radical mastectomy, or
a local wide excision or lumpectomy. They
had also all had surgery removing lymph
nodes from the axilla, or armpit, to
determine the extent of the cancer.
Specially designed programs included
range-of-motion movements for the shoulders
and stretching exercises.
The review showed that starting exercise
early after surgery — within the first to
third day —might result in better shoulder
movement in the early weeks following
surgery.
However, “starting exercise that soon after
surgery may cause more wound drainage and
require drains to remain in place longer
than if exercise is delayed by about one
week,” McNeely said. Early exercise
lengthened wound-healing time by about one
day.
The review was published by The Cochrane
Collaboration, an international organization
that evaluates medical research. Systematic
reviews draw evidence-based conclusions
about medical practice after considering
both the content and quality of existing
medical trials on a topic.
Fourteen studies compared the effect of
structured exercise to usual care, in which
women received an exercise pamphlet or no
exercise instruction at all.
Of these, structured programs including
physical therapy regimens in the early
postoperative period led to a significant
improvement in shoulder range of motion over
the short and long term.
One problem that can affect women after
breast surgery is lymphedema, which is
swelling caused by fluid buildup. This
swelling begins in the underarm area but can
affect the entire arm, usually on the side
of the breast surgery, and can be
uncomfortable or even painful.
Several persistent complications can greatly
diminish a patient’s quality of life, said
Douglas Blayney, M.D., medical director at
the University of Michigan’s Comprehensive
Cancer Center.
Blayney said that although current surgical
treatment is attempting to move away from
disturbing the axilla, more women,
especially younger women, are choosing
mastectomy over breast conserving surgery.
Mastectomy has a higher incidence of swelling and limited
shoulder motion. There is a trend now toward
increasing use of radiation therapy to the
axilla and this approach also might increase
the risk of swelling, he said.
“Combined, these trends in primary treatment
of breast cancer make this review highly
relevant,” said Blayney, who has no
affiliation with the review. Nevertheless,
he noted that making suitable exercise
programs widely available to breast cancer
patients in a timely manner would be a
challenge.
He said optimal breast cancer care now
involves a team with a wide range of health
specialists: surgeons, radiation
oncologists, medical oncologists,
reconstructive surgeons and others. “This
review demonstrates that early involvement
of a new team member who manages exercise or
physical therapy is also useful for the best
outcome,” he said.
Blayney added that he finds few things as
disheartening as seeing a breast cancer
survivor in long-term follow-up who is cured
yet burdened with a “frozen” shoulder or
daily use of a lymphedema sleeve, an elastic
compression garment worn over the arm to
help move fluid and reduce swelling.
“Implementation of modern primary treatment
strategies — including early intervention
with suitable exercises — should reduce the
incidence of these heartbreaking
complications,” Blayney said.
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