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 ...
Building a consistent workout routine doesn’t require extreme motivation or intense training sessions. Fitness experts say the real secret is integrating exercise into your daily life in a way that ...
Among patients on q2-week chemotherapy, exercise significantly reduced overall cognitive decline, perceived cognitive impairment, and mental fatigue versus usual care. Attenuated effects with ...
Strength training protocols include fewer reps, more sets and higher intensity for your main lifts, so we will be lifting heavy! Accessory lifts are at a lower intensity, higher reps and fewer sets.
A structured home-based exercise program (EXCAP) reduces "chemo brain" and prevents physical decline during cancer treatment.
Sitting for a long period of time can leave you feeling cramped, stiff, and uncomfortable. It can also aggravate some health conditions. About 1 in 1,000 Americans each year develop dangerous clots, ...
A new study offers encouraging news for older adults with chronic respiratory conditions who may struggle to access traditional gym-based rehabilitation programs. Researchers found that pulmonary ...
Researchers recommended a tailored, scientifically validated exercise program to individuals receiving chemotherapy for ...
Let’s start by addressing the elephant in the room: Aging doesn’t equal decline. Getting older doesn’t automatically include growing weaker, slower and more fragile. As Kris Herbert, founder and ...
I had already banged up my knee pretty badly--a hairline fracture in my tibia left me pain that would follow me for years. By the time I was 26, the pain was still there and I never thought it would ...