Fatigue in Cancer provides a comprehensive review of the key issues involved in the research and practical application of current evidence and best practice guidelines for addressing cancer-related fatigue. An international group of contributors draw together core topics relating to this complex area of cancer management, focusing on issues of definition, patho-physiology, treatment related variables and the psychological, social and emotional impact on patients, familiesand carers. Critical reviews of practical management strategies for both adults and children are included, as are the current approaches to the measurement of cancer-related fatigue in clinical and research contexts. The book contributes a multi-disciplinary overview of a problem increasingly overlooked bycancer scientists, researchers, and clinicians. This book demonstrates the considerable capacity of cancer-related fatigue to impact on quality of life. Its multi-disciplinary focus and consideration of prioritised areas of future research will ensure that it is will prove invaluable for all health professionals and researchers in oncology and palliative care.
Introduction; Part 1 - The Nature and Pathophysiology of Fatigue; Definitions, epidemiology, and models of fatigue in the general population and in cancer; A critical appraisal of the factors associated with fatigue; Mechanisms and models of fatigue associated with cancer and its treatment: evidence of pre-clinical and clinical studies; Cancer cachexia and anorexia and their role in cancer fatigue; Part 2 - The Experience of Fatigue; Fatigue in lay conceptualisations of health and illness; The experience of cancer-related fatigue; Carers, caring, and cancer related fatigue; The experience of cancer-related fatigue in children, adolescents and their families; Part 3 - The Assessment and Management of Fatigue; The assessment and measurement of fatigue in people with cancer; Fatigue and depression in cancer patients: conceptual and clinical issues; Mental fatigue and cognitive dysfunction; Clinical interventions for fatigue; Fatigue and everyday function in people living with cancer; The therapeutic effects of exercise on fatigue;
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