Tango helps cancer patients get back on their feet
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While many people turn to dancing to stay fit and lose weight, a new study suggests swaying to the beat may also offer therapeutic benefits. Researchers at The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center have taken the results a step further by teaching the tango to cancer patients.
Tim Hickey, a cancer survivor who suffered nerve damage in his legs and feet as a result of chemotherapy for Hodgkin’s Lymphoma, could hardly walk before being introduced to the tango.
“The only thing I could feel in my feet was the balls,” Hickey told FoxNews.com. “I couldn’t feel the toes, couldn’t feel the heels.”
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Hickey isn’t alone. Nearly 70 percent of patients suffer from nerve damage in their hands and feet after only one month of chemotherapy. Six months post-treatment, one in three of these patients still experience adverse symptoms.
OSU researchers turned to Mimi Lamantia, a student double-majoring in premed and dance, to come up with a way to help cancer patients struggling with balance. Together, they zeroed in on the tango.
“Even [with] just five weeks of Argentine tango we were able to decrease that medial and lateral sway by 56 percent,” Lamantia told FoxNews.com.
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Many cancer patients may also suffer muscle loss, which the tango can also help to rebuild.
“The improvement was remarkable,” Hickey said. “And I don’t think we would have improved nearly that quickly without it.”