2005
DOI: 10.1038/sj.leu.2403799
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Intrahospital supervised exercise training: a complementary tool in the therapeutic armamentarium against childhood leukemia

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Cited by 25 publications
(19 citation statements)
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References 36 publications
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“…While other studies have shown improvement in these outcomes in late maintenance or survivorship, our study did not generate any data for intervals when children were completely off drug treatment. Beginning shortly after diagnosis and following participants through the end of therapy, however, may have resulted in the study participants/parents simply being too sick/overwhelmed particularly at T 0 –T 2 to complete the intervention with the frequency and intensity necessary to improve function; they eventually may have experienced intervention fatigue over the 30‐month timeframe.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 85%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…While other studies have shown improvement in these outcomes in late maintenance or survivorship, our study did not generate any data for intervals when children were completely off drug treatment. Beginning shortly after diagnosis and following participants through the end of therapy, however, may have resulted in the study participants/parents simply being too sick/overwhelmed particularly at T 0 –T 2 to complete the intervention with the frequency and intensity necessary to improve function; they eventually may have experienced intervention fatigue over the 30‐month timeframe.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…With a survival rate exceeding 93%, children with ALL have a potentially positive future if intervention can diminish early loss of physical function and modify the later effects of therapy. Recent reports urge early physical activity to minimize the sequelae of treatment in childhood cancer survivors; prescribed physical activity, even at low intensity and duration levels, has demonstrated changes in remarkably short periods of time in young cancer patients and survivors . However, the physical activity interventions for ALL that have been tested have started after functional loss has occurred, involved small and/or nonrandomized samples, been of short duration, and had minimal or no follow‐up to monitor behavior sustainability and durability.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…82,83 The experts highlight the potential health benefits of an enhanced physical fitness and well-being in survivors of cancer. 77,82,84 In this regard, Lucia et al 85 have indicated that even although exercise training most likely will not improve survival rates, supervised exercise has the potential to considerably improve children's quality of life and overall health status during treatment periods.…”
Section: Physical Fitness and Cancermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additionally to the medical, surgical and radiological treatment of cancer, specifi c physical exercise regimes to enhance quality of life (QoL) and to decrease or even prevent side eff ects have been established in the last time [2,9,14,33] . Despite a fast growing amount of publications describing the positive eff ects of this exercise modalities in adults, only limited attention is given to this eff ective supportive therapy in children [20,21] . For example San Juan et al [28] showed positive physiological and psychological eff ects in a study with children (aged 8 -16 years) undergoing a supervised exercise program.…”
Section: Introduction ▼mentioning
confidence: 98%