Why
does exercise protect against cancer? Inflammation may play a role
One of the most important
benefits of exercise is in how it reduces our risk of developing a number of
types of cancer — especially colorectal cancer, which according to some
estimates is the malignancy most influenced by physical activity. But how
workouts guard against colon cancer remains largely unknown. The new done at
the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia, and other institutions
recruiting 20 men who had survived colon cancer. (Women were excluded because
menstruation might have affected results.).
The scientists asked 10
of the men to start working out strenuously three times a week: pedaling a
stationary bicycle hard for four minutes, resting for three, and repeating that
sequence three more times. They trained for a month and then, a few days after
completing the program, rested quietly while researchers drew blood. The other
10 men completed the same 4 x 4 interval session, but only once. The researchers
drew their blood before, immediately following and an additional two hours
after that lone workout.
The scientists then
carefully added a tiny amount of fluid from the men’s blood to petri dishes
containing human colon-cancer tumor cells often used to study cancer growth. At
several points during the subsequent 72 hours, the researchers counted the
numbers of cells in each dish. They soon saw substantial differences.
In the dishes containing
fluid taken from the men immediately after a single workout, the scientists
counted far fewer cancer cells than in those awash in fluid drawn two hours
after exercise. There was no similar decline in the dishes from the men who had
trained for a month. In effect, something about the blood drawn immediately
after the workout was slowing the growth of cancer cells.
The researchers think
they may have identified that something in subsequent analyses of the men’s
blood. They found a large increase in molecules involved in inflammation
immediately after exercise. Inflammation can slow cell growth and reproduction.
So a transitory increase in inflammatory markers after exercise might be
helping to jam the proliferation of tumor cells.
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