Padin Avelina C, Wilson Stephanie J, Bailey Brittney E, Malarkey William B, Lustberg Maryam B, Farrar William B, Povoski Stephen P, Agnese Doreen M, Reinbolt Raquel E, Wesolowski Robert, Williams Nicole, Sardesai Sagar, Ramaswamy Bhuvaneswari, Noonan Anne M, Vandeusen Jeffrey B, Haas Garrie J, Kiecolt-Glaser Janice K
Institute for Behavioral Medicine Research, The Ohio State University College of Medicine, 460 Medical Center Drive, Columbus, OH, 43210, USA.
Department of Psychology, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA.
Int J Behav Med. 2019 Jun;26(3):237-246. doi: 10.1007/s12529-019-09778-3.
Prior to treatment, breast cancer patients are less physically fit compared to peers; during cancer treatment, their fitness typically declines. Depressive symptoms are associated with reduced activity up to 5 years post-treatment, but research has not identified mechanisms linking depression and lower activity. The current study assessed relationships among breast cancer patients' depression and perceived exertion during exercise as well as heart rate, an objective indicator of exertion.
Participants were 106 breast cancer patients, stages I-IIIA, who completed surgery but had not started adjuvant treatment. Heart rate and self-rated exertion, measured using the Borg Scale of Perceived Exertion, were assessed every 2 min during a graded exercise test. Depression was assessed using the CES-D and a structured clinical interview.
Compared to women below the CES-D clinical cutoff, women with significant depressive symptoms reported steeper increases in exertion during the exercise test (p = .010) but had similar heart rates (p = .224) compared to women below the cutoff. Major depression history was unrelated to perceived exertion (ps > .224) and heart rate (ps > .200) during exercise.
Women with currently elevated depressive symptoms experienced exercise as more difficult compared to women below the CES-D cutoff, but these self-perceptions did not reflect actual heart rate differences. Depression may make exercise feel more demanding, which could ultimately decrease patients' likelihood of engaging in regular exercise. Results support the use of depression screening tools following breast cancer surgery to identify and intervene on individuals at risk for decreased physical activity during survivorship.
在接受治疗之前,乳腺癌患者的身体状况比同龄人差;在癌症治疗期间,他们的身体状况通常会下降。抑郁症状与治疗后长达5年的活动量减少有关,但研究尚未确定将抑郁与较低活动量联系起来的机制。本研究评估了乳腺癌患者的抑郁与运动时的自感用力程度以及心率(用力程度的客观指标)之间的关系。
参与者为106名I-IIIA期乳腺癌患者,他们已完成手术但尚未开始辅助治疗。在分级运动试验期间,每2分钟评估一次心率和使用自感用力程度Borg量表测量的自感用力程度。使用流调中心抑郁量表(CES-D)和结构化临床访谈评估抑郁情况。
与CES-D临床临界值以下的女性相比,有明显抑郁症状的女性在运动试验中报告的用力程度增加更为陡峭(p = 0.010),但与临界值以下的女性相比,心率相似(p = 0.224)。重度抑郁病史与运动期间的自感用力程度(p值> 0.224)和心率(p值> 0.200)无关。
与CES-D临界值以下的女性相比,目前抑郁症状加重的女性感觉运动更困难,但这些自我认知并未反映实际的心率差异。抑郁可能会使运动感觉更费力,这最终可能会降低患者进行定期运动 的可能性。结果支持在乳腺癌手术后使用抑郁筛查工具,以识别和干预在生存期有身体活动减少风险的个体。