UCLA researchers have discovered
that the Chinese practice of tai chi can reduce inflammation in people who
have had breast cancer, thereby reducing a risk factor for the recurrence of
the cancer.
Current research indicates that
women diagnosed with breast cancer in the past 10 years are three times more
likely to suffer from lack of sleep. Insomnia can lead to increases in
inflammation, which places breast cancer survivors at risk for cancer
recurrence as well as cardiovascular disease.
Led by UCLA Jonsson Comprehensive
Cancer Center member Dr. Michael Irwin, researchers conducted a five-year
randomized clinical trial from April 2007 to August 2013. His team analyzed
blood samples from 90 participants between 30 to 85 years old, before and
after they started the tai chi routine.
“When people practice tai chi,
there is a decrease in the stress hormones produced by the sympathetic
nervous system,” said Irwin, who is professor of psychiatry and biobehavioral
sciences at UCLA.
Irwin and his colleagues also
discovered that tai chi relaxes the body to a certain point that it can
reduce inflammation, which is commonly seen in most breast cancer survivors
after treatment.
“We saw that tai chi reversed
cellular inflammation, by producing a down-regulation of the genes that lead
to inflammation,” said Dr. Irwin. “Tai chi is a movement meditation, and we
have found that similar anti-inflammatory effects occur when people practice
other forms of meditation.”
Irwin said that he hopes the
exercise will gain in popularity, particularly in low-income communities where
many do not have immediate access to breast cancer treatment.
Two-time breast cancer survivor
Linda Tucker has had many sleepless nights until recently.
“I absolutely did not sleep, my
eyes would not stay asleep, my body just would not relax and I found myself
awake until six in the morning,” said Tucker.
Desperate to find a cure for her
sleeping problems, Tucker decided to participate in Irwin’s tai chi study at
UCLA despite her initial skepticism.
“I said to myself, this has to be
a joke, this is not going to work or do anything. But after two sessions the
insomnia started going away,” she said. “I just felt a sense of
peacefulness.”
The study was published online Nov.
4 in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
|
Tuesday, November 18, 2014
Tai Chi Helps Breast Cancer Patients, UCLA Research Said
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