Blacklock Rachel, Rhodes Ryan, Blanchard Chris, Gaul Catherine
Department of National Defence, Human Performance Research and Development, Victoria, Canada.
Oncol Nurs Forum. 2010 Mar;37(2):206-12. doi: 10.1188/10.ONF.206-212.
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVES: To determine whether acute exercise reduces state anxiety and whether this reduction is moderated by the sample (i.e., breast cancer survivors versus those without a cancer diagnosis), exercise intensity (i.e., moderate versus light), and the potential sample times intensity interactions; and to explore whether changes in self-efficacy and state anxiety reciprocally predict each other as suggested by social cognitive theory.
Repeated-measures, experimental pilot.
University laboratory.
Breast cancer survivors (n = 25) and age-matched women without a cancer diagnosis (n = 25).
Cycling for 20 minutes at light and moderate intensities on two separate occasions. State anxiety and self-efficacy measures were completed before, immediately following, and 10 minutes after exercise.
State anxiety, self-efficacy, and light and moderate exercise.
2 (sample) x 2 (intensity condition) x 3 (time) repeated-measure analyses of variance revealed a main effect for time (p < 0.01, eta2 = 0.37, F[2, 86] = 24.687), but between-sample and exercise intensity interaction effects were not significant. Autoregressive path analysis using ordinary least squares multiple regression revealed significant reciprocation for self-efficacy and anxiety pre-exercise (light intensity beta = 0.49, p < 0.05; moderate intensity beta = -0.37, p < 0.05) and post-exercise (moderate intensity beta = -0.31, -0.23, p < 0.05).
Acute exercise at light and moderate intensity decreases state anxiety for breast cancer survivors and those without a diagnosis. Additional research is warranted.
Light- and moderate-intensity exercise may be a valuable alternative anxiolytic tool that also allows for the acquisition of myriad additional known health benefits associated with exercise.
目的/目标:确定急性运动是否能减轻状态焦虑,以及这种减轻是否受样本(即乳腺癌幸存者与未患癌症者)、运动强度(即中等强度与低强度)以及潜在的样本×时间×强度交互作用的调节;并探讨自我效能感和状态焦虑的变化是否如社会认知理论所暗示的那样相互预测。
重复测量实验性试点研究。
大学实验室。
乳腺癌幸存者(n = 25)和年龄匹配的未患癌症女性(n = 25)。
在两个不同时间段分别进行20分钟的低强度和中等强度骑行。在运动前、运动后即刻以及运动后10分钟完成状态焦虑和自我效能感测量。
状态焦虑、自我效能感以及低强度和中等强度运动。
2(样本)×2(强度条件)×3(时间)重复测量方差分析显示时间存在主效应(p < 0.01,η² = 0.37,F[2, 86] = 24.687),但样本间和运动强度交互效应不显著。使用普通最小二乘法多元回归的自回归路径分析显示,运动前(低强度β = 0.49,p < 0.05;中等强度β = -0.37,p < 0.05)和运动后(中等强度β = -0.31,-0.23,p < 0.05)自我效能感和焦虑存在显著的相互作用。
低强度和中等强度的急性运动可降低乳腺癌幸存者和未患癌症者的状态焦虑。需要进一步研究。
低强度和中等强度运动可能是一种有价值的替代抗焦虑工具,还能带来与运动相关的众多其他已知健康益处。