Lillian Nail
Oregon Health & Science University
75 Papers
656 Citations
Lillian Nail is an academic researcher from Oregon Health & Science University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cancer & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 35, co-authored 75 publications. Previous affiliations of Lillian Nail include University of Utah.
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Papers
Fatigue in Parkinson's disease: a review.
Joseph H. Friedman,Richard G. Brown,Cynthia L. Comella,Carol Ewing Garber,Lauren B. Krupp,Jau-Shin Lou,Laura Marsh,Lillian Nail,Lisa M. Shulman,C. Barr Taylor +9 more
TL;DR: What is known about fatigue in Parkinson's disease is reviewed, putting it into the context of fatigue in other disorders, and a program for developing better understanding and therapy is outlined.
357
Symptom cluster research: conceptual, design, measurement, and analysis issues.
TL;DR: Studying the complex symptoms of oncology patients will yield increased understanding of the patterns of association, interaction, and synergy of symptoms that produce specific clinical outcomes, and provide a scientific basis and new directions for clinical assessment and intervention.
295
A randomized clinical trial of energy conservation for patients with cancer-related fatigue.
Andrea M. Barsevick,William N. Dudley,Susan L. Beck,Carole Sweeney,Kyra Whitmer,Lillian Nail +5 more
TL;DR: The efficacy of energy conservation and activity management (ECAM) for fatigue reduction and maintenance of functional performance has never been evaluated in adults with cancer who are undergoing treatment.
236
Motivational interviewing to increase physical activity in long-term cancer survivors: a randomized controlled trial.
TL;DR: Use of MI may increase physical activity in long-term cancer survivors, especially in persons with high self-efficacy for exercise, as well as improving aerobic fitness, physical and mental health, and fatigue.
226
Strength training stops bone loss and builds muscle in postmenopausal breast cancer survivors: a randomized, controlled trial
Kerri M. Winters-Stone,Jessica Dobek,Lillian Nail,Jill A. Bennett,Michael C. Leo,Arpana Naik,Anna L. Schwartz +6 more
TL;DR: A combined program of resistance + impact exercise reduced risk factors for fracture among postmenopausal breast cancer survivors (BCS) and may be particularly relevant for BCS on aromatase inhibitors (AIs) because of the additional benefit of exercise on muscle mass that could reduce falls.
216