UF researcher to study if acupuncture could help
cancer patients
Saun-Joo Yoon, an associate
professor of nursing, has received a UF Research Opportunity Seed Fund award
for 2014-2016 to conduct the study.
Yoon and colleagues from the UF
colleges of Medicine, Public Health and Health Professions, and Pharmacy will
study the impact of an acupuncture intervention to counteract weight loss in
gastrointestinal cancer patients with cachexia, a wasting syndrome whose
symptoms are characterized by involuntary weight and muscle loss that cannot be
reversed nutritionally.
The intervention, called
mechanism-based acupuncture, addresses the specific symptoms of a disease or
condition.
“Treatment for cancer such as chemotherapy
and tumor-mediated metabolic changes can cause weight loss, systemic
inflammation and muscle waste, which negatively impacts patients’ health at a
critical time,” Yoon said. “We want to explore whether complementary treatments
like acupuncture specifically focused on these symptoms can improve their
appetite and overall health outcomes, including their physical functioning and
quality of life.”
Yoon’s past research has focused on
how complementary and alternative medicines can promote health and manage
chronic illness in adult populations.
Yoon, who is one of 16 UF faculty
member principal investigators to receive this award, and her research team
will receive $84,000 over two years.
UF distributes approximately 15-18
Research Opportunity Seed Fund awards each year, which range from $65,000 to
$85,000.
Source of the report is here.
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