Fatigue and anemia
On this page:
Overview
What is fatigue?
The majority of people with cancer feel fatigue, especially those who have had surgery or are receiving radiotherapy and/or chemotherapy treatments. Fatigue can disrupt your sense of well-being, limit your activities and interfere with your relationships. It is often described as the symptom that causes the most distress and the one that lasts the longest.
Fatigue is the most common symptom of cancer and can be acute or chronic. Cancer fatigue is different from the normal tiredness sometimes felt by a healthy person. Cancer fatigue can have an effect on the physical, emotional, and mental aspects of daily life. Patterns of fatigue depend on the type of treatment you are receiving.
Characteristics of fatigue
- Physical: You feel weak. Your arms and legs feel heavy. Your sleep is disturbed. You have trouble completing your usual activities.
- Emotional: You feel unmotivated. You have lost interest in your usual activities. You feel sad, frustrated, or irritable.
- Mental: You have difficulty concentrating. Your short-term memory is poor.
While feeling tired may seem like a minor inconvenience compared to some of the other issues you experience, it can have a serious impact on your day-to-day activities and quality of life.
Fatigue facts
Studies of prostate cancer patients have found that:
- As many as 74% of prostate cancer patients experienced cancer‑related fatigue
- Fatigue is associated with all treatments for prostate cancer
What causes fatigue?
Fatigue is seldom caused by only one factor. It is usually caused by a combination of factors related to cancer or cancer treatments. Some of the reasons include:
Cancer and cancer treatment
Cancer itself can cause changes in your body, like increasing its need for energy. Chemotherapy and radiation therapy may also cause fatigue as your body works to repair your damaged non‑cancerous cells. Treatments that cause side effects like anemia and pain, or that affect your hormones, can also contribute to fatigue.
The following are some examples of patterns of fatigue:
- Surgery‑related fatigue: After any surgery, it is normal to feel tired or weak for several months. Energy levels will be worse right after surgery and will gradually pick up afterward.
- Radiotherapy‑related fatigue: Fatigue increases steadily from one treatment to the next. When the treatments are done, the fatigue will disappear but this may take several months.
- Hormone therapy-related fatigue: This fatigue may be directly related to the drop in your testosterone level and any other side effect that results (hot flashes, loss of libido, physical changes, loss of concentration, etc.). Regardless of the duration of your treatment, you can improve your energy level with the tips below.
- Chemotherapy or other oral treatments for advanced cancer‑related fatigue: Fatigue increases a few days after each treatment. It may decrease slightly before the next one but will not return to normal levels until several months after they are all finished.
Poor nutrition
When you have cancer, your body’s need for nutrients and its ability to process those nutrients may change. However, side effects like low appetite, nausea, and vomiting can make it difficult to meet your nutrient needs.
Lack of exercise
If you’re normally an active person, the effects of fatigue can feel more pronounced because you don’t have the energy to maintain your usual level of physical activity
Useful Tips
Managing fatigue‑related factors
If your fatigue is caused by something specific, your healthcare team can take steps to treat it. Treatments can include prescribing nutritional supplements, medication, or blood transfusions. Be sure to keep your healthcare team up to date on how you’re feeling.
Emotional distress
Studies suggest that 40% of cancer patients have significant depression or anxiety. Being depressed or anxious can rob you of energy.
What you can do
- It is normal to have periods of feeling “down” but if these feelings persist for a long time, it is wise to speak with a healthcare professional. Sometimes just talking about your feelings is enough to help. In other cases, medications may help to relieve the distress.
Disturbed sleep
People with cancer have more trouble falling asleep and staying asleep than “healthy” people.
What you can do
- Try to go to sleep and wake up at the same time each day.
- Take short naps (30 minutes) but avoid long, late afternoon naps.
- Make sure that your bedroom is dark and quiet.
- Relax before going to bed.
- Make sure your bed, pillows, and sheets are comfortable.
- For several hours before bedtime, avoid alcohol, caffeine, exercise and eating.
- If you wake up and can’t fall back to sleep, get up and do something quiet and boring until you feel tired again. While you are up, try not to watch the clock or turn on bright lights.
- Speak with your healthcare professional about sleeping medications.
Poor nutrition
People with cancer or cancer treatments can lose their appetite and may experience nausea, vomiting or diarrhea. Weight loss is a sign that you are not taking in enough energy to meet your body’s needs. When you are not taking in enough energy, you may feel fatigue. Check out our Nutrition and healthy body section.
What you can do
- Eat your meals at the same time each day.
- Eat smaller, more frequent meals (i.e. six small meals per day).
- Eat foods that are high in protein (chicken, fish, meat, dairy, peanut butter, eggs).
- Drink plenty of fluids.
- Speak with your doctor about seeing a dietitian.
- If you continue to experience a lack of appetite, ask your doctor about appetite stimulants.
Lack of exercise
Many people believe that resting in bed will help them to recover faster from their cancer. This is not true. Prolonged bed rest has many dangerous effects on the human body including weakness, blood clots, depression, poor balance, and fatigue. Low to moderate daily exercise is one of the most effective ways to manage fatigue.
What you can do
- Try low to moderate exercise (like walking) balanced with periods of rest.
- If you have any of the following conditions, you are advised to see a physiotherapist before exercising: infection, cancer in your bones, low platelets, or low red blood cells.
Chronic pain
Unrelieved pain is strongly associated with fatigue. Your body uses energy as it struggles to function through the pain.
What you can do
- Use pain medications as prescribed. It is very important to keep on top of the pain. The longer the pain continues, the harder it is to treat.
- If you continue to feel pain, speak with your doctor. They can help you find a more suitable pain medication or suggest some other ways to manage pain.
Medications
There are several medications that can cause fatigue. They include blood pressure medications, opioids (morphine‑based pain medications), anti-depressants, anti‑nausea medications, and antihistamines.
What you can do
- Ask your doctor if your medications cause fatigue. If so, your doctor may adjust the dose or choose another medication.
Anemia
Anemia is caused by an abnormally low level of red blood cells or hemoglobin. Cancer or its treatments – such as chemotherapy or oral treatment for advanced cancer – may be the cause. Fatigue and lack of drive are among the first signs of anemia. Anemia should not be neglected.
What you can do
- Ask your healthcare professional if you have anemia. If so, find out which of these ways to manage anemia is suitable for you:
- Eat iron‑rich foods or iron supplements (liver, legumes, green vegetables, nuts and seeds, orange juice, etc.)
- Blood transfusions
- Erythropoietin: this is an injection that helps your body to produce more red blood cells
Other bodily processes
- Healing: Your body uses energy to repair tissues that are damaged during treatment or surgery.
- Chronic inflammation: when you have cancer or undergo cancer treatments, your body can produce inflammatory molecules that may cause fatigue.
- Disease progression: although there are many other causes of fatigue, fatigue can sometimes signify disease progression.
These causes of fatigue are difficult to reverse. It is important to learn how to conserve and manage the energy that you have. Ask for help. Your family and friends are there to support you, so don’t be shy about taking them up on offers to help. Cooking, chores, driving, and taking care of pets are just some of the simple ways they can help.
Valuable energy
Strategies for conserving your energy:
- Performing demanding activities at peak energy times
- Balancing activities with periods of rest
- Prioritizing
- Delegating
- Pacing yourself
- Using labor‑saving devices (raised toilet seat, electric can opener, etc.)
Strategies for increasing your energy:
- Spending time in a natural environment (outdoors)
- Do things that you enjoy
- Certain medications may increase your mental alertness. Ask your doctor if these are appropriate for you.
Working with your healthcare team
If your fatigue has a specific cause, your healthcare team can take steps to treat it, such as nutritional supplements, medicines or blood transfusions, so always keep them up to date on how you’re feeling.
We are here for you
You have questions or concerns? Don’t hesitate. Contact us at 1-855-899-2873 to discuss with one of our nurses specialized in uro-oncology. They are there to listen, support and answer your questions, and those of your family or your loved ones. It’s simple and free, like all of our other services.
Also take the time to visit each of our pages on this website, as well as our YouTube channel, in order to get familiar with the disease, our expert lectures, our section on available resources, the support that is offered to you, our events and ways to get involved to advance the cause.
Staying Informed
Pages that might interest you
Want to know more? Just click on one of the links below.
The latest PROCURE news that might interest you
Every week we publish a blog article. Here are some we have chosen for you.
The medical content and editorial team at PROCURE
Our team is composed of urologists, and nurses certified in uro-oncology with a deep knowledge of prostate cancer and other diseases related to the genitourinary system. Meet our staff by clicking here.
Sources and references
- Prostate Cancer – Understand the disease and its treatments; Fred Saad, MD, FRCSC and Michael McCormack, MD, FRCSC, 4th et 5th editions
- Canadian Cancer Society
- Prostate Cancer Foundation-PCF.org
- National Cancer Institute-USA
- American Cancer Society
- Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
- Prostate Cancer UK
Last medical and editorial review: September 2023
Written by PROCURE. © All rights reserved
Fatigue and anemia
- Side effects
- Fatigue and anemia
- Anatomy
- Structure
- Function
Fatigue and anemia
The majority of people with cancer feel fatigue, especially those who have had surgery or are receiving radiotherapy and/or chemotherapy treatments. Fatigue can disrupt your sense of well-being, limit your activities and interfere with your relationships. It is often described as the symptom that causes the most distress and the one that lasts the longest.
Overview
Fatigue is the most common symptom of cancer and can be acute or chronic. Cancer fatigue is different from the normal tiredness sometimes felt by a healthy person. Cancer fatigue can have an effect on the physical, emotional, and mental aspects of daily life. Patterns of fatigue depend on the type of treatment you are receiving.
Characteristics of fatigue
- Physical: You feel weak. Your arms and legs feel heavy. Your sleep is disturbed. You have trouble completing your usual activities.
- Emotional: You feel unmotivated. You have lost interest in your usual activities. You feel sad, frustrated, or irritable.
- Mental: You have difficulty concentrating. Your short-term memory is poor.
While feeling tired may seem like a minor inconvenience compared to some of the other issues you experience, it can have a serious impact on your day-to-day activities and quality of life.
Fatigue facts
Studies of prostate cancer patients have found that:
- As many as 74% of prostate cancer patients experienced cancer‑related fatigue
- Fatigue is associated with all treatments for prostate cancer
What causes fatigue?
Fatigue is seldom caused by only one factor. It is usually caused by a combination of factors related to cancer or cancer treatments. Some of the reasons include:
Cancer and cancer treatment
Cancer itself can cause changes in your body, like increasing its need for energy. Chemotherapy and radiation therapy may also cause fatigue as your body works to repair your damaged non‑cancerous cells. Treatments that cause side effects like anemia and pain, or that affect your hormones, can also contribute to fatigue.
The following are some examples of patterns of fatigue:
- Surgery‑related fatigue: After any surgery, it is normal to feel tired or weak for several months. Energy levels will be worse right after surgery and will gradually pick up afterward.
- Radiotherapy‑related fatigue: Fatigue increases steadily from one treatment to the next. When the treatments are done, the fatigue will disappear but this may take several months.
- Hormone therapy-related fatigue: This fatigue may be directly related to the drop in your testosterone level and any other side effect that results (hot flashes, loss of libido, physical changes, loss of concentration, etc.). Regardless of the duration of your treatment, you can improve your energy level with the tips below.
- Chemotherapy or other oral treatments for advanced cancer‑related fatigue: Fatigue increases a few days after each treatment. It may decrease slightly before the next one but will not return to normal levels until several months after they are all finished.
Poor nutrition
When you have cancer, your body’s need for nutrients and its ability to process those nutrients may change. However, side effects like low appetite, nausea, and vomiting can make it difficult to meet your nutrient needs.
Lack of exercise
If you’re normally an active person, the effects of fatigue can feel more pronounced because you don’t have the energy to maintain your usual level of physical activity.
Managing fatigue‑related factors
If your fatigue is caused by something specific, your healthcare team can take steps to treat it. Treatments can include prescribing nutritional supplements, medication, or blood transfusions. Be sure to keep your healthcare team up to date on how you’re feeling.
Emotional distress
Studies suggest that 40% of cancer patients have significant depression or anxiety. Being depressed or anxious can rob you of energy.
What you can do
- It is normal to have periods of feeling “down” but if these feelings persist for a long time, it is wise to speak with a healthcare professional. Sometimes just talking about your feelings is enough to help. In other cases, medications may help to relieve the distress.
Disturbed sleep
People with cancer have more trouble falling asleep and staying asleep than “healthy” people
What you can do
- Try to go to sleep and wake up at the same time each day.
- Take short naps (30 minutes) but avoid long, late afternoon naps.
- Make sure that your bedroom is dark and quiet.
- Relax before going to bed.
- Make sure your bed, pillows, and sheets are comfortable.
- For several hours before bedtime, avoid alcohol, caffeine, exercise and eating.
- If you wake up and can’t fall back to sleep, get up and do something quiet and boring until you feel tired again. While you are up, try not to watch the clock or turn on bright lights.
- Speak with your healthcare professional about sleeping medications.
Poor nutrition
People with cancer or cancer treatments can lose their appetite and may experience nausea, vomiting or diarrhea. Weight loss is a sign that you are not taking in enough energy to meet your body’s needs. When you are not taking in enough energy, you may feel fatigue. Check out our Nutrition and healthy body section.
What you can do
- Eat your meals at the same time each day.
- Eat smaller, more frequent meals (i.e. six small meals per day).
- Eat foods that are high in protein (chicken, fish, meat, dairy, peanut butter, eggs).
- Drink plenty of fluids.
- Speak with your doctor about seeing a dietitian.
- If you continue to experience a lack of appetite, ask your doctor about appetite stimulants.
Lack of exercise
Many people believe that resting in bed will help them to recover faster from their cancer. This is not true. Prolonged bed rest has many dangerous effects on the human body including weakness, blood clots, depression, poor balance, and fatigue. Low to moderate daily exercise is one of the most effective ways to manage fatigue.
What you can do
- Try low to moderate exercise (like walking) balanced with periods of rest.
- If you have any of the following conditions, you are advised to see a physiotherapist before exercising: infection, cancer in your bones, low platelets, or low red blood cells.
Chronic pain
Unrelieved pain is strongly associated with fatigue. Your body uses energy as it struggles to function through the pain.
What you can do
- Use pain medications as prescribed. It is very important to keep on top of the pain. The longer the pain continues, the harder it is to treat.
- If you continue to feel pain, speak with your doctor. They can help you find a more suitable pain medication or suggest some other ways to manage pain.
Medications
There are several medications that can cause fatigue. They include blood pressure medications, opioids (morphine‑based pain medications), anti-depressants, anti‑nausea medications, and antihistamines.
What you can do
- Ask your doctor if your medications cause fatigue. If so, your doctor may adjust the dose or choose another medication.
Anemia
Anemia is caused by an abnormally low level of red blood cells or hemoglobin. Cancer or its treatments – such as chemotherapy or oral treatment for advanced cancer – may be the cause. Fatigue and lack of drive are among the first signs of anemia. Anemia should not be neglected.
What you can do
- Ask your healthcare professional if you have anemia. If so, find out which of these ways to manage anemia is suitable for you:
- Eat iron‑rich foods or iron supplements (liver, legumes, green vegetables, nuts and seeds, orange juice, etc.)
- Blood transfusions
- Erythropoietin: this is an injection that helps your body to produce more red blood cells
Other bodily processes
- Healing: Your body uses energy to repair tissues that are damaged during treatment or surgery.
- Chronic inflammation: when you have cancer or undergo cancer treatments, your body can produce inflammatory molecules that may cause fatigue.
- Disease progression: although there are many other causes of fatigue, fatigue can sometimes signify disease progression.
These causes of fatigue are difficult to reverse. It is important to learn how to conserve and manage the energy that you have. Ask for help. Your family and friends are there to support you, so don’t be shy about taking them up on offers to help. Cooking, chores, driving, and taking care of pets are just some of the simple ways they can help.
Strategies for conserving your energy:
- Performing demanding activities at peak energy times
- Balancing activities with periods of rest
- Prioritizing
- Delegating
- Pacing yourself
- Using labor‑saving devices (raised toilet seat, electric can opener, etc.)
Strategies for increasing your energy:
- Spending time in a natural environment (outdoors)
- Do things that you enjoy
- Certain medications may increase your mental alertness. Ask your doctor if these are appropriate for you.
Working with your healthcare team
If your fatigue has a specific cause, your healthcare team can take steps to treat it, such as nutritional supplements, medicines or blood transfusions, so always keep them up to date on how you’re feeling.
Additional details
La prostate se compose de milliers de minuscules glandes. Plus particulièrement, la prostate est une glande exocrine. Les glandes exocrines portent ce nom parce qu’elles sécrètent des liquides qui transitent par des canaux débouchant vers l’extérieur du corps (ou dans une cavité qui communique avec l’extérieur). Les glandes sudoripares constituent un autre exemple de glandes exocrines.
Le liquide produit par la prostate s’intègre au sperme, c’est-à-dire au liquide séminal qui transporte les spermatozoïdes pendant l’éjaculation. Le liquide élaboré dans la prostate est conservé avec le sperme dans les vésicules séminales. À l’orgasme, des contractions musculaires amènent la prostate à sécréter ce liquide dans l’urètre, d’où il est expulsé du corps par l’intermédiaire du pénis.
La prostate entoure l’urètre dans son trajet de la vessie au pénis. Les changements au niveau de la prostate (voir l’HBP) peuvent avoir des répercussions sur l’écoulement de l’urine. En effet, l’augmentation de la taille de la prostate ou de son tonus musculaire peut entraver l’écoulement de l’urine, de par l’intime relation anatomique qui existe entre l’urètre et la prostate.
De plus, la prostate produit une protéine appelée antigène prostatique spécifique (APS) (les acronymes ASP et PSA sont aussi utilisés pour désigner l’antigène prostatique spécifique). L’APS est libéré avec l’éjaculation et se retrouve aussi dans le sang. L’analyse des concentrations d’APS dans le sang sert à déceler le cancer de la prostate. Il se mesure en nanogrammes par millilitre.
Habituellement, on juge normal un taux d’APS qui affiche moins de 4 nanogrammes par millilitre de sang, mais l’âge doit être prit en considération aussi, l’APS augmentant graduellement de façon normale avec l’âge. Une élévation de la concentration d’APS peut indiquer la présence:
- d’une hypertrophie bénigne de la prostate (HBP)
- d’une prostatite: une infection de la prostate
- d’un cancer de la prostate
Votre spécialiste vous fera passer les tests appropriés pour déterminer la cause exacte de l’augmentation de votre taux d’APS.
Vous avez des questions ou des préoccupations? Surtout, n’hésitez pas. Contactez-nous au 1 855 899-2873 pour discuter avec un de nos professionnels de la santé spécialisés en uro-oncologie. Ils sont là pour écouter, soutenir et répondre à vos questions, celles de votre famille ou de vos proches. C’est simple et gratuit, comme tous nos services d’ailleurs.
Prenez également le temps nécessaire pour consulter chacune de nos pages sur ce site Web, de même que notre chaîne YouTube, question de vous familiariser avec la maladie, nos conférences et nos webinaires animés par des experts, les ressources disponibles, le soutien qui vous est offert, nos événements et les façons de vous impliquer pour faire avancer la cause.
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Sources and references
Last medical and editorial review: April 2024. See our web page validation committee and our collaborators by clicking here.
On this page:
Discover our animated video!
Symptoms, risk and screening
Are you over 50 years old, or have you been having urinary problems for some time now? This video is for you! Several diseases can affect your prostate, and it’s important to detect them early. Let’s take a closer look.
Anatomy
What is the prostate
The prostate is a gland:
- Located between the bladder and the penis, just in front of the rectum;
- Formed of 2 lobes which surround the urethra, a canal that runs through the center of the prostate, from the bladder to the penis, letting urine and sperm flow out of the body;
- The size of a walnut, which grows larger in size in your forties;
- That has a soft, spongy texture to the touch like a small, ripe plum.
The prostate is made of:
- Gland cells that secrete liquids for ejaculation;
- Muscle cells that participate in the evacuation of your sperm during ejaculation;
- Fiber cells that maintain the structure of the gland.
Around the prostate, we find:
- The seminal vesicles, glands that produce sperm and that are located on either side of the prostate;
- The vas deferens, the tube that carries sperm from the testicle to the seminal vesicles;
- The nerve bundles that control your bladder and erectile function and that are located on either side of your prostate.
Structure
Three main zones of the prostate
Peripheral zone
- The peripheral zone is the largest area of the prostate. It can easily be felt by the doctor during a digital rectal exam (DRE).
- Most prostate cancers start in the peripheral zone.
Transition zone
- This is the area located in the middle of the prostate, between the peripheral and central areas. It surrounds your urethra that runs through the prostate.
- With age, the transitional area increases in size until it becomes the largest portion of your prostate. This is called benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) or enlarged prostate.
Central zone
- It is the part of the prostate that is farthest from the rectum. This is why prostate tumors located in this area can not be felt by the doctor during a digital rectal examination.
- If the doctor is in doubt, the following information will help decide if additional investigation is necessary:
- Your PSA level
- Your age and family history
- Your ethnic origin
Fonction
In short
Your fertility and natural fertilization
- It produces … a prostatic fluid rich in enzymes, proteins and minerals that nourishes and protects your spermatozoa.
- It makes … a protein (APS) that is used to liquefy your sperm to facilitate the mobility of your spermatozoa.
- It allows … ejaculation by contracting.
- It promotes … fertility through its enzymes facilitating the penetration of sperm through the cervix.
- It is not related to the mechanism of erection. Therefore, the origin of erectile dysfunction lies elsewhere.
Additional details
Exocrine Function
The prostate is made up of thousands of tiny fluid-producing glands. Specifically, the prostate is an exocrine gland. Exocrine glands are so-called because they secrete through ducts to the outside of the body (or into a cavity that communicates with the outside). Sweat glands are another example of an exocrine gland.
The fluid that the prostate gland produces forms part of semen, the fluid that carries sperm during orgasm. This fluid, produced in the prostate, is stored with sperm in the seminal vesicles. When the male climaxes, muscular contractions cause the prostate to secrete this fluid into the urethra, where it is expelled from the body through the penis.
Urine Flow
The prostate wraps itself around the urethra as it passes from the bladder to the penis. Prostatic changes can affect urine flow. Increasing the size of the prostate or muscle tone may impede the flow of urine due to the close anatomical relationship between the urethra and the prostate.
Prostate Specific Antigen (PSA)
The prostate also produces a protein called prostate-specific antigen (PSA). PSA is released with the ejaculatory fluid and can also be traced in the bloodstream. The testing of PSA levels in the blood is used to detect prostate cancer. The level of PSA in the blood is usually measured in nanograms of PSA per milliliter of blood (ng/mL).
A raised PSA level
Usually, a PSA rate of less than 4 nanograms per milliliter of blood is normal, but age should also be taken into consideration as PSA levels gradually increase with age. A rise in PSA concentration may indicate the presence of:
- An enlarged prostate (benign prostatic hyperplasia)
- An inflammation or infection of the prostate (prostatitis)
- A prostate cancer
Your doctor will have you undergo other tests to determine the exact cause of the increase in your PSA.
We are here for you
You have questions or concerns? Don’t hesitate. Contact us at 1-855-899-2873 to discuss with one of our nurses specialized in uro-oncology. They are there to listen, support and answer your questions, and those of your family or your loved ones. It’s simple and free, like all of our other services.
Also take the time to visit each of our pages on this website, as well as our YouTube channel, in order to get familiar with the disease, our expert lectures, our section on available resources, the support that is offered to you, our events and ways to get involved to advance the cause..
Staying Informed
Pages that might interest you
Want to know more? Just click on one of the links below.
The latest PROCURE news that might interest you
Every week we publish a blog article. Here are some for you.
The medical content and editorial team at PROCURE
Our team is composed of urologists, and nurses certified in uro-oncology with a deep knowledge of prostate cancer and other diseases related to the genitourinary system. Meet our staff by clicking here.
Sources and references
- Prostate Cancer – Understand the disease and its treatments; Fred Saad, MD, FRCSC and Michael McCormack, MD, FRCSC, 4th et 5th editions
- Canadian Cancer Society
- Prostate Cancer Foundation-PCF.org
- National Cancer Institute-USA
- American Cancer Society
- Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
- Prostate Cancer UK
Last medical and editorial review: September 2023
Written by PROCURE. © All rights reserved