Exercise and Diet Protect Mice Against Colorectal Cancer in Study
Posted on: Tuesday, 16 May 2006, 06:04 CDT
Voluntary exercise and a restricted diet reduced the number and size of precancerous polyps in the intestines of male mice and improved survival, according to a study at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
The study, published in the journal Carcinogenesis, is the first to suggest that a "negative energy balance" - produced by increasing the mice's energy output by use of a running wheel, while maintaining a restricted calorie intake - appeared to be the important factor in inhibiting the growth of polyps, which are the forerunners of colorectal tumors, according to the study's lead author Lisa Colbert, assistant professor in the UW-Madison department of kinesiology.
For the study, Colbert and her co-authors used mice with a genetic mutation that predisposed them to develop intestinal polyps.
"Our studies are relevant for humans in that these mice have a mutation in one of the same genes, APC, that is also mutated in human colon cancer," explained Ms Colbert. "The protective effect of exercise and lower body weight in our mice is consistent with epidemiological evidence in humans that suggests higher levels of activity and lower body weight reduces the risk of colon cancer."
Mutations in the APC gene in humans are responsible for an inherited condition called familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP). This condition affects about one in 10,000 - 15,000 people worldwide, and 95% of those affected develop polyps in the colon that eventually progress into cancer, usually before age 40.
The researchers randomly assigned seven-week-old male mice to either voluntary wheel running or to no exercise for 10 weeks.
By the end of the 10 weeks, six of the 23 control mice had died due to the number of polyps that had grown and the resulting anaemia, while all 24 exercising mice were still alive.
Source: Datamonitor
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