PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Football improves strength in men with prostate cancer

2014-06-19
(Press-News.org) Men with prostate cancer aged 43‒74 achieve bigger and stronger muscles, improve functional capacity, gain positive social experiences and the desire to remain active through playing football for 12 weeks. These are the findings of the "FC Prostate" trial, jointly conducted by the University Hospitals Centre for Health Care Research at The Copenhagen University Hospital, Rigshospitalet and the Copenhagen Centre for Team Sport and Health at the University of Copenhagen.

Some of the participants in the FC Prostate Cancer research project after a training session. Download free press photo here. Credit: 'Copenhagen Centre for Teamsport and Health'.

The acclaimed Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports is today publishing two articles on recreational football (soccer) for 43‒74-year-old men with prostate cancer. The first article shows that twice-weekly 1-hour football training sessions for 12 weeks produce an increase in muscle mass and muscle strength despite concurrent androgen deprivation therapy. The second article describes how recreational football is a promising novel approach for health promotion in prostate cancer patients as the participants regain pride in their bodies, develop team spirit and mutual concern increasing their motivation for long-term participation in sport.

Regained body pride and strong social cohesion

"This is the first study of its kind in the world, and the results clearly show the potential of recreational football in the rehabilitation of prostate cancer patients," says project leader Julie Midtgaard, a psychologist at The Copenhagen University Hospital Rigshospitalet. "Just 12 weeks of football training resulted in the men regaining control and developing a unique exchange of feelings and recognition centered around the sport."

The attendance rate was high over the 12 weeks, and many of the participants are still playing football two years after the project began.

"The provision of football proved to be a good way of developing friendships between the men and a unique model for men with prostate cancer to take responsibility of their own health without giving up their claim to feel and behave like men," concludes Midtgaard.

Bigger and stronger muscles in spite of anti-hormone treatment

"Androgen deprivation therapy through medical castration is an effective treatment of prostate cancer patients but has adverse effects in the form of reduced muscle mass, higher fat percentage and reduced physical activity," explains Professor Peter Krustrup, who co-initiated the study with Midtgaard and has been studying the effects of recreational football for the past 10 years.

"Twelve weeks of football training increased muscle mass by half a kilo in the football group in spite of the anti-hormone treatment and contributed to a 15% increase in muscle strength. The players in the FC Prostate team thus achieved excellent gains in functional capacity as a result of 12 weeks of football training, measured among other things as a 8% improvement in performance in the stand-sit test," says Krustrup.

"Our study also showed that recreational football was fun and inclusive for the participants in FC Prostate, and for every training session the intensity was high, with an average heart rate of 85% of the participants' maximum heart rate," says Krustrup.

Football is good rehabilitation for prostate cancer patients

"Previously, we showed that recreational football is effective for preventing and treating lifestyle diseases. With this study, we can add that recreational football can also be used for rehabilitation of a large group of cancer patients," says Krustrup.

Midtgaard concludes: "The study indicates that men with prostate cancer benefit greatly from recreational football, both physically and mentally. It has also proved to be easy to keep the men involved in physical activity once they have started playing football. They look forward to going to training and enjoy it tremendously when they get there. The next step is to evaluate the effectiveness of football in a more natural setting. Therefore we are delighted that we have received the necessary funding to pursue an even bigger project in collaboration with the Danish Football Association in which more than 300 prostate cancer patients will be invited to play football in local football clubs in Denmark."

INFORMATION: About the study

The training project was a randomised controlled trial involving 57 men aged 67 (range: 43‒74) years who had been undergoing treatment for prostate cancer for an average of 3 years. They were randomly assigned to a football training group or an inactive control group. The football group trained twice a week for 1 hour for 12 weeks.

The training took place on the football pitch of the Department of Nutrition, Exercise and Sports at Nørrebro in Copenhagen. An extensive testing protocol was used before the start of training and on completion of the 12-week training period. The project was implemented jointly by Rigshospitalet, the Copenhagen Centre for Team Sport and Health at the University of Copenhagen and the Department of Cardiology at Gentofte Hospital.

The study was supported by TrygFonden and The Centre for Integrated Rehabilitation of Cancer Patients funded by the Danish Cancer Society and The Novo Nordisk Foundation. With a view to extending football training to a bigger and broader target group of men with prostate cancer, the project will be followed up with new research to test football as a strategy for health promotion in conjunction with the Danish Football Association and TrygFonden.

The two articles are today being published in a special issue of the Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports on the topic of football for health.

Contact

Julie Midtgaard (psychologist), Senior Researcher, The University Hospitals Centre for Health Care Research, Copenhagen University Hospital, Rigshospitalet, Denmark.
e-mail: julie@ucsf.dk – tel.: +45 35 45 73 67 / 26 16 17 55

Peter Krustrup (physiologist), Professor, Copenhagen Centre for Team Sport and Health, University of Copenhagen, Denmark and University of Exeter, United Kingdom.
e-mail: pkrustrup@nexs.ku.dk – tel.: +45 21 16 15 30

Bo Kousgaard, Head of Communication, Copenhagen Centre for Team Sport and Health, University of Copenhagen.
e-mail: bok@science.ku.dk – tel.: +45 23 23 86 24


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Following direction: How neurons can tell top from bottom and front from back

2014-06-19
TORONTO – The question of how neurons and their axons establish spatial polarity and direction in tissues and organs is a fundamental question of any organism or biological system. Our cells and axons precisely orient themselves in response to external cues, but what are the core pathways and how are they integrated? Lead author Dr. Naomi Levy-Strumpf and principal investigator Dr. Joseph Culotti developed a novel conceptual framework, published on-line in PLoS GENETICS, June 5 2014. They investigated netrin and Wnt, signaling pathways that are implicated in cancer ...

Telephone call is effective support when breast cancer treatment includes weight loss

2014-06-19
TORONTO – A series of simple telephone calls can make a profound difference in helping women to meet their treatment goals for breast cancer, according to a randomized trial of women who are also obese, published online today in Journal of Clinical Oncology by Dr. Pamela Goodwin of Mount Sinai Hospital and the Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute. Women who received advice about weight loss from a trained lifestyle coach by telephone achieved weight loss that was still evident after two years, lowering their risk of breast cancer recurrence. It's already known that ...

Evolution depends on rare chance events, 'molecular time travel' experiments show

2014-06-19
Chance events may profoundly shape history. What if Franz Ferdinand's driver had not taken a wrong turn, bringing the Duke face to face with his assassin? Would World War I still have been fought? Would Hitler have risen to power decades later? Historians can only speculate on what might have been, but a team of evolutionary biologists studying ancient proteins has turned speculation into experiment. They resurrected an ancient ancestor of an important human protein as it existed hundreds of millions of years ago and then used biochemical methods to generate and characterize ...

Small but significant

Small but significant
2014-06-19
They may only be little, but they pack a star-forming punch: new observations from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope show that starbursts in dwarf galaxies played a bigger role than expected in the early history of the Universe. Although galaxies across the Universe are still forming new stars, the majority of the stars were formed between two and six billion years after the Big Bang. Studying this early epoch of the Universe's history is key in order to fully understand how these stars formed, and how galaxies have grown and evolved since. A new study using data ...

Report shows citizen-designed county redistricting worked

Report shows citizen-designed county redistricting worked
2014-06-19
(THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. – June 19, 2014) The citizen-designed redistricting plan for the Ventura County supervisorial districts has brought fairer representation, according to a study by a California Lutheran University professor published June 19 by SAGE Open, an open-access journal by SAGE. Gregory Freeland, chairman of the Department of Political Science, compared Ventura County supervisors' decisions to their constituents' votes on state propositions and local measures and interviewed politicians and community activists to draw conclusions that could have implications ...

Penn study reveals a common genetic link in fatal autoimmune skin disease

2014-06-19
PHILADELPHIA – Autoimmune disease occurs when the body's own natural defense system rebels against itself. One example is pemphigus vulgaris (PV), a blistering skin disease in which autoantibodies attack desmoglein 3 (Dsg3), the protein that binds together skin cells. Left untreated, PV can be fatal, as skin layers slough off and leave the body vulnerable to dehydration and infection. Researchers from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania recently found a shared genetic link in the autoimmune response among PV patients that provides important ...

Federal funding cliff could cause health safety net clinics to shrink by one-quarter

Federal funding cliff could cause health safety net clinics to shrink by one-quarter
2014-06-19
WASHINGTON, DC and NEW YORK (June 19, 2014)— A special federal fund to support community health centers expires after September 2015, creating a funding cliff for primary care clinics located in medically underserved areas. If this funding is not restored, and if more states do not expand Medicaid, the number of patients cared for by safety-net health centers could fall more than 25 percent – or 7 million patients - by 2020. The loss of care for 7 million patients is equivalent to the population of the state of Arizona or the combined populations of Los Angeles and Houston. These ...

Improving academic performance with physical fitness

2014-06-19
Cincinnati, OH, June 19, 2014 -- Physical fitness in childhood and adolescence is beneficial for both physical and mental health throughout life. However, a growing body of evidence suggests that it may also play a key role in brain health and academic performance. In a new study scheduled for publication in the Journal of Pediatrics, researchers studied the independent and combined influence of components of physical fitness on academic performance. Cardiorespiratory capacity, muscular strength, and motor ability are components of physical fitness that have documented ...

'Smart glass' micro-iris for smartphone cameras

2014-06-19
A small, low-powered camera component made from a "smart glass" material has been created by a group of researchers in Germany with the hope of inspiring the next generation of smartphone cameras. The micro-iris is an electro-chemical equivalent to the bulky, mechanical blades that are usually found in cameras and has very low power consumption, making it an ideal component for a wide-range of camera-integrated consumer devices. The device and the first results of its performance have been presented in a study published today, 19 June, in IOP Publishing's Journal of ...

Job loss linked with higher incidence of depression in Americans compared with Europeans

2014-06-19
19 June 2014, Oxford, UK: A new study published online in the International Journal of Epidemiology (IJE) today shows that while job loss is associated with depressive symptoms in both the USA and Europe, the effects of job loss due to plant closure are much stronger in American workers as compared with European workers. The 'Great Recession' of 2008 caused significant job losses in both Europe and the USA, with particularly strong consequences for older workers. Among persons aged 50-64, unemployment rates rose from 3.1% to 7.3% in the USA, and from 5.4% to 6.15% in ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Press registration is now open for the 2026 ACMG Annual Clinical Genetics Meeting

Understanding sex-based differences and the role of bone morphogenetic protein signaling in Alzheimer’s disease

Breakthrough in thin-film electrolytes pushes solid oxide fuel cells forward

Clues from the past reveal the West Antarctic Ice Sheet’s vulnerability to warming

Collaborative study uncovers unknown causes of blindness

Inflammatory immune cells predict survival, relapse in multiple myeloma

New test shows which antibiotics actually work

Most Alzheimer’s cases linked to variants in a single gene

Finding the genome's blind spot

The secret room a giant virus creates inside its host amoeba

World’s vast plant knowledge not being fully exploited to tackle biodiversity and climate challenges, warn researchers

New study explains the link between long-term diabetes and vascular damage

Ocean temperatures reached another record high in 2025

Dynamically reconfigurable topological routing in nonlinear photonic systems

Crystallographic engineering enables fast low‑temperature ion transport of TiNb2O7 for cold‑region lithium‑ion batteries

Ultrafast sulfur redox dynamics enabled by a PPy@N‑TiO2 Z‑scheme heterojunction photoelectrode for photo‑assisted lithium–sulfur batteries

Optimized biochar use could cut China’s cropland nitrous oxide emissions by up to half

Neural progesterone receptors link ovulation and sexual receptivity in medaka

A new Japanese study investigates how tariff policies influence long-run economic growth

Mental trauma succeeds 1 in 7 dog related injuries, claims data suggest

Breastfeeding may lower mums’ later life depression/anxiety risks for up to 10 years after pregnancy

Study finds more than a quarter of adults worldwide could benefit from GLP-1 medications for weight loss

Hobbies don’t just improve personal lives, they can boost workplace creativity too

Study shows federal safety metric inappropriately penalizes hospitals for lifesaving stroke procedures

Improving sleep isn’t enough: researchers highlight daytime function as key to assessing insomnia treatments

Rice Brain Institute awards first seed grants to jump-start collaborative brain health research

Personalizing cancer treatments significantly improve outcome success

UW researchers analyzed which anthologized writers and books get checked out the most from Seattle Public Library

Study finds food waste compost less effective than potting mix alone

UCLA receives $7.3 million for wide-ranging cannabis research

[Press-News.org] Football improves strength in men with prostate cancer