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Publication : Effect of exercise on natural cytotoxicity and pulmonary tumor metastases in mice.

First Author  MacNeil B Year  1993
Journal  Med Sci Sports Exerc Volume  25
Issue  8 Pages  922-8
PubMed ID  8371653 Mgi Jnum  J:34422
Mgi Id  MGI:82632 Citation  MacNeil B, et al. (1993) Effect of exercise on natural cytotoxicity and pulmonary tumor metastases in mice. Med Sci Sports Exerc 25(8):922-8
abstractText  Exercise has been demonstrated to reduce experimental tumor formation in rodents when the exercise is present during the tumor initiation or promotion phases. This study evaluated whether exercise influenced the process of tumor metastasis and subsequent growth in a secondary implant site. Male C3H mice remained sedentary, were given free access to running wheels, ran on a treadmill (15 m.min-1, 30 min.d-1), or walked on a treadmill (5 m.min-1, 5 min.d-1)(N = 20/group). Following 9 wk of this protocol, exercise was discontinued. At this time all animals received a tumor cell dose (CIRAS 1, 3 x 10(5)) i.v., and remained sedentary until sacrificed 3 wk later. Splenic natural killer (NK) cell activity was elevated in the wheel running mice compared with sedentary controls 3 wk after cessation of exercise (F(3,74) = 6.266, P < 0.002). Exercised mice displayed lower tumor cell retention in the lungs relative to nonexercised mice (F(1,37) = 6.593, P < 0.02). Tumor incidence was not different across activity groups whereas tumor multiplicity was higher in mice that had been previously exposed to exercise. (However, it should be noted that the significant exercise-tumor effect was due to a small number of exercised mice with extreme multiplicity, > 200 foci/lung.) More extensive tumor colony formation was present in wheel-trained mice that displayed the greatest volumes of daily running. The results from this study suggest that exercise was able to augment natural immune cytotoxic function for up to 3 wk after cessation of activity. However, this augmentation of natural immune function was not associated with reduced tumor incidence in the exercised animals.
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