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Plenty of sleep and exercise may lower cancer risk



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Published Date: 18 November 2008
EXERCISE and sleep work together to reduce the risk of cancer, research has shown.
A ten-year study of almost 6,000 women found that significantly fewer cancers occurred in those who were physically active. But sleeping less than seven hours a night wiped out the benefits of exercise and increased the risk of cancer.

"Current fi
ndings suggest that sleep duration modifies the relationship between physical activity and all-site cancer risk among young and middle-aged women," said research leader Dr James McClain, of the US National Cancer Institute.

Dr McClain's team assessed the effect of physical activity energy expenditure (PAEE) on the overall incidence of cancer, as well as their likelihood of developing breast or colon cancers.

All the women were aged over 18 and had no previous history of cancer. A total of 604 experienced a first incidence of cancer during the study period.

Women judged to be in the top 50 per cent PAEE bracket showed a significantly reduced overall risk of cancer. But for women aged under 65, getting less than seven hours sleep cancelled out much of the protective effect of physical activity.

The findings were presented yesterday at an American Association for Cancer Research international conference in Washington DC.

Dr McClain said the next step would be to investigate the link underlying the anti-cancer interaction between sleep and exercise.

Experts are not sure how exercise reduces cancer risk but believe hormone levels, immune function and body weight may all be involved.





The full article contains 258 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 17 November 2008 9:48 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Cancer research
 
1

DeniseX,

18/11/2008 12:58:44
Sleep walkers will have little chance of getting cancer then?
2

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 18/11/2008 15:45:45
I agree with #2 JayDeeTee

Is this a form of sexism or could they not get enough male volunteers to participate in this VERY important study?

Men get cancer - especially prostate cancer - and we also take naps.

This study is flawed because it only concentrated on women and should have included men.

Maybe that is "Phase 2" of the study? One certainly hopes so.

I take "catnaps" regularly but anything beyond 45 minutes is counter-productive since you go into REM sleep and awake almost in a coma because your body AND brain have closed down as if sleeping soundly at night.
3

Dr Finlay,

Tannochbrae 18/11/2008 22:45:25
Tim

As usual your comments are uninformed - limiting this to women is not sexist or flawed - it simply means that any conclusions only apply to women!

Your comment about prostate cancer shows how little your understand statistics.

The flaw in this research is the apparent failure to exclude associated effects or confounding factors.

The most obvious of these is that women who get a lot of sleep and exercise well are more likely to live generally healthy lifestyles (better food, lower smoking, lower alcohol intake, better health awareness) than the general population of women. Therefore, unless matched control groups were studied to eliminate these variables, the conclusion that sleep and exercise has any effect is not fully valid.

It would be like counting the number of people carrying umbrellas and concluding that umbrellas caused rain to fall from the sky!

 

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