The Institute for Prostate Cancer Research launched a series of exercise videos for people with prostate cancer in summer 2020 to help these patients design and maintain an individual exercise routine ...
Exercise has many benefits for men with prostate cancer, both during and after treatment. Staying active helps you manage treatment side effects like incontinence, builds your strength, and lifts your ...
The answer depends on your individual risk for bone fracture and the type of exercise. For most men with early prostate cancer, it’s safe to engage in light or moderate exercise. Physical activity is ...
Treatments for prostate cancer can cause side effects such as loss of muscle mass and fatigue. Finding the time and energy to exercise is difficult for many people. For men diagnosed with prostate ...
Prostate cancer treatment can be detrimental to bone and muscle health, but an exercise regimen and healthy eating habits can help. Androgen deprivation therapy (ADT), also known as hormone therapy, ...
With either observation or AS, treatment may become warranted if monitoring suggests that the cancer is spreading or it begins to progress more rapidly. The research team enrolled 52 men with prostate ...
Men with prostate cancer who participated in group-based resistance and aerobic exercise regimens had improved sexual function compared with those who underwent usual care. Men with prostate cancer ...
Credit: Thinkstock Investigators report beneficial effects of aerobic high-intensity training on cardiometabolic biomarkers. Men on active surveillance for prostate cancer who participated in aerobic ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. By Carolyn Crist (Reuters Health) - Men with prostate cancer that hasn’t spread may have longer survival the more they exercise, a ...
DURHAM, N.C. -- Prostate tumors grew more quickly in mice who exercised than in those who did not, leading to speculation that exercise may increase blood flow to tumors, according to a new study by ...
A new study adds to growing evidence that exercise is an important part of preventing one of America’s deadliest cancers. By Talya Minsberg In recent years, one of the most provocative questions in ...