Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

PHYSICAL THERAPY CAN BE A KEY FACTOR IN RECOVERY FOLLOWING BREAST CANCER

- BY SANDRA GUY For the Sun-Times Sandra Guy is a freelance writer.

Breast cancer survivors and patients can become stronger and healthier — mentally and physically — according to health care experts who say physical therapy is often a crucial piece of the recovery.

The experts agree that getting quick referrals to physical therapy can halt pain and loss of mobility, especially in breast cancer patients’ arms and upper body resulting from breast or lymph node surgery.

Maria Jaramillo, a 57-year-old mother of two and grandmothe­r of four who lives in Berwyn, is a breast-cancer survivor who got timely physical therapy and became a vigorous exercise enthusiast.

Jaramillo had surgery and chemothera­py nearly a decade ago and now works out at least twice a week by walking and using exercise machines at the Loyola Fitness Center — a regimen she said lets her battle fatigue, chronic shoulder pain and cancerrela­ted swelling near her armpit.

“I have more energy,” she said. When Jaramillo goes to the fitness center in the mornings, she walks for 35 to 45 minutes and then exercises for 20 minutes on an “arm bike,” also known as an upper-body ergometer, in which you pedal the machine with your arms.

She walks for another 45 minutes in the afternoons in her neighborho­od.

October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month — the perfect time for people to get screened — as in mammograms and ultrasound­s. Experts say that hospitals and treatment centers have COVID-19 safety measures in place, and it’s vitally important to detect breast cancer as early as possible through regular screenings.

Leslie J. Waltke, a doctor of physical therapy who is an oncology physical therapy specialist and cancer rehab coordinato­r for Advocate Aurora Health, designed four stretches for breast cancer patients to combat muscle tissue shortening, connective tissue shortening or thickening and layers of tissue sticking together — all which can cause muscle aches. (No one should attempt the exercises without first consulting their own physician.)

Eric Hughes, a doctor of physical therapy and physical therapy facility manager at SHIFT/Athletico, a private concierge wellness center at 750 N. Orleans Ave., said people who’ve had breast cancer surgery can suffer from restricted mobility because of what’s known as cording — Axillary Web Syndrome — when tissue under the arm scars.

The situation can be offset in many cases by getting immediate physical therapy, which could include lymph massage, gentle stretching, myofascial release, soft-tissue manipulati­on and physical therapist-guided massage, he said.

Long-term, experts say it’s important that breast cancer patients boost their health by going beyond stretching into regular cardio and weight-resistance exercises.

“Lifting weights is good,” Waltke said. “It decreases the risk of muscle and bone loss and makes people stronger and healthier. The more you use the arm, the less pain, the less chance for long-term side effects.

“We recommend every patient get a physical therapist. We don’t want people to assume, ‘I’m supposed to be weak and not use that arm again,’ ” she said.

Doctors say they work with patients to access some type of health care insurance coverage and ensure that the uninsured and underinsur­ed get access to physical and other therapies.

Waltke set up and leads the Waltke Cancer Rehabilita­tion Academy based in Milwaukee, which trains doctors, hospitals and other care centers in building rehab programs for all types of cancer.

Dr. Shelly Lo, an oncologist at Loyola University Medical Center who specialize­s in breast cancer, refers patients to Loyola’s Center for Fitness, adjacent to the Maywood medical center, to help them regain strength and mobility.

The fitness center’s Next Steps Fitness Programs starts with a personaliz­ed assessment, then takes into account patients’ goals and makes sure they exercise with a trainer’s guidance. The goal is to motivate the breast cancer survivors to keep up their own exercise routines.

Lo, also a professor of medicine at Loyola’s Stritch School of Medicine, said she sees to it that patients who develop lymphedema — arm or breast swelling due to breast cancer treatment — get referred to physical therapists with expertise in complete decongesti­ve therapy.

“The sooner treatment is started, the more successful it can be,” she said.

Another little-talked-about after-effect of breast cancer treatment is weight gain — as much as 20 pounds — which can cause joint pain and mental distress. That’s a concern because obesity is a risk factor for breast cancer.

So Patricia Sheean a registered dietitian and assistant professor of nutrition at Loyola University Chicago’s Parkinson School of Health Sciences and Public Health, said she urges breast cancer patients, like anyone else, to get at least 150 minutes a week of moderate to vigorous physical activity and eat a healthy, plantfocus­ed diet. That’s the recommenda­tion of the American Cancer Society and the American Institute for Cancer Research once doctors clear patients for exercise.

“You should be breathing hard while you exercise,” she said.

NOTE: Please consult with your doctor or other health care provider before attempting any exercises depicted in this article.

 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES ?? Breast cancer survivor Maria Jaramillo goes through her workout at Loyola University Medical Center in Maywood.
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES Breast cancer survivor Maria Jaramillo goes through her workout at Loyola University Medical Center in Maywood.

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