Exercise prehabilitation for brain health and sensory-cognitive function: Mechanistic insights into brain-body interactions.

IF 2.8 4区 医学 Q2 PHYSIOLOGY
Helen E Nuttall, Daren Subar, Christopher J Gaffney
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This mini review article presents a novel hypothesis for extending exercise prehabilitation into the domains of brain health and cognition. Whilst prehabilitation has been gaining popularity in cancer treatment, conferring significant positive benefits to numerous physiological indicators, including post-operative infection and hospital length of stay, the benefits to patients' brain health and cognition are underexplored. There lies a timely and exciting opportunity in expanding prehabilitation to target neural and sensory dysfunction in cancer patients. We review data from healthy adults on the benefits of exercise to brain structure and function, and cognitive and sensory domains. Finally, we review how exercise could improve brain health, as well as sensory systems of the body, which are often negatively affected by cancer and associated treatment. We also outline further physiological contexts outside of cancer in which prehabilitation could also benefit brain health. Through this synthesis, we seek to inspire novel research into prehabilitation and brain health to further improve patient health and wellbeing.

运动康复对大脑健康和感觉-认知功能的影响:脑-体相互作用的机制见解。
这篇小型综述文章提出了一个新的假设,将运动康复扩展到大脑健康和认知领域。虽然康复在癌症治疗中越来越受欢迎,对许多生理指标(包括术后感染和住院时间)都有显著的积极益处,但对患者大脑健康和认知的益处尚未得到充分探讨。将康复治疗扩展到针对癌症患者的神经和感觉功能障碍,这是一个及时而令人兴奋的机会。我们回顾了健康成年人关于运动对大脑结构和功能以及认知和感觉领域的益处的数据。最后,我们回顾了运动如何改善大脑健康,以及身体的感觉系统,这些系统经常受到癌症和相关治疗的负面影响。我们还概述了癌症之外的进一步的生理背景,其中预适应也可能有益于大脑健康。通过这种综合,我们寻求激发对康复和大脑健康的新研究,以进一步改善患者的健康和福祉。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Experimental Physiology
Experimental Physiology 医学-生理学
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
3.70%
发文量
262
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Experimental Physiology publishes research papers that report novel insights into homeostatic and adaptive responses in health, as well as those that further our understanding of pathophysiological mechanisms in disease. We encourage papers that embrace the journal’s orientation of translation and integration, including studies of the adaptive responses to exercise, acute and chronic environmental stressors, growth and aging, and diseases where integrative homeostatic mechanisms play a key role in the response to and evolution of the disease process. Examples of such diseases include hypertension, heart failure, hypoxic lung disease, endocrine and neurological disorders. We are also keen to publish research that has a translational aspect or clinical application. Comparative physiology work that can be applied to aid the understanding human physiology is also encouraged. Manuscripts that report the use of bioinformatic, genomic, molecular, proteomic and cellular techniques to provide novel insights into integrative physiological and pathophysiological mechanisms are welcomed.
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