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SeminarPast EventNeuroscience

Mechanisms Underlying the Persistence of Cancer-Related Fatigue

Elisabeth G. Vichaya

Dr.

Baylor University

Schedule
Tuesday, May 23, 2023

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Schedule

Tuesday, May 23, 2023

4:00 PM Europe/Lisbon

Host: Brain-Body Interactions

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Event Information

Domain

Neuroscience

Original Event

View source

Host

Brain-Body Interactions

Duration

70 minutes

Abstract

Cancer-related fatigue is a prominent and debilitating side effect of cancer and its treatment. It can develop prior to diagnosis, generally peaks during cancer treatment, and can persist long after treatment completion. Its mechanisms are multifactorial, and its expression is highly variable. Unfortunately, treatment options are limited. Our research uses syngeneic murine models of cancer and cisplatin-based chemotherapy to better understand these mechanisms. Our data indicate that both peripherally and centrally processes may contribute to the developmental of fatigue. These processes include metabolic alterations, mitochondrial dysfunction, pre-cachexia, and inflammation. However, our data has revealed that behavioral fatigue can persist even after the toxicity associated with cancer and its treatment recover. For example, running during cancer treatment attenuates kidney toxicity while also delaying recovery from fatigue-like behavior. Additionally, administration of anesthetics known to disrupt memory consolidation at the time treatment can promote recovery, and treatment-related cues can re-instate fatigue after recovery. Cancer-related fatigue can also promote habitual behavioral patterns, as observed using a devaluation task. We interpret this data to suggest that limit metabolic resources during cancer promote the utilization of habit-based behavioral strategies that serve to maintain fatigue behavior into survivorship. This line of work is exciting as it points us toward novel interventional targets for the treatment of persistent cancer-related fatigue.

Topics

behavioural fatiguecancercancer-related fatiguechemotherapycisplatinfatigueinflammationmemory consolidationmetabolic alterationsmitochondrial dysfunctionpre-cachexia

About the Speaker

Elisabeth G. Vichaya

Dr.

Baylor University

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

vichayapnigroup.com

@EGVichaya

Follow on Twitter/X

twitter.com/EGVichaya

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