A structured home-based exercise program (EXCAP) reduces "chemo brain" and prevents physical decline during cancer treatment.
Among patients on q2-week chemotherapy, exercise significantly reduced overall cognitive decline, perceived cognitive impairment, and mental fatigue versus usual care. Attenuated effects with ...
A single exercise session increased electrical activity in a brain region tied to learning and memory, a first-of-its-kind ...
Op-Ed: What I tell my patients—and what I try to practice myself—is this: you don’t need perfection. You just need to move.
A team at the University of California, San Francisco has identified a specific liver-produced enzyme that explains, at the molecular level, how physical exercise protects the aging brain from ...
A University of Iowa-led research team has documented in humans that physical exercise sparks an increase in brain waves ...
Significantly less cancer-related cognitive impairment, mental fatigue after chemotherapy ...
Exercise may help mitigate cancer treatment side effects, such as brain fog, pain, and fatigue. Image credit: Hernandez & Sorokina/Stocksy. Cancer treatments can cause a host of health problems. For ...
New research suggests that exercise may help people with cancer stay mentally sharp and better able to handle daily tasks, work, and social activities through chemotherapy treatment delivered on an ...
Exercise is important for health. Neuroscientists now know how much 150 minutes of weekly cardio can do exactly for the brain in midlife.
When mice exercise, their livers release GPLD1 into the bloodstream. The enzyme travels to the blood vessels surrounding the brain and removes TNAP from the surface of those cells. By trimming away ...