Abstract

Patients with breast cancer receiving chemotherapy can experience chemotherapy-related cognitive impairment (CRCI). This study observed the interventional effects of multisensory stimulation training on CRCI in patients with breast cancer receiving chemotherapy. Eighty patients with breast cancer receiving chemotherapy at a grade A tertiary hospital in Tangshan City, Hebei Province, China, were divided into two intervention groups (audiovisual and multisensory) by random sampling (40 patients per group). After four intervention cycles, participants' cognitive and executive function scores were higher in the multisensory group than in the audiovisual group. Multisensory stimulation training had stronger effects than audiovisual training and effectively attenuated CRCI and executive dysfunction caused by breast cancer chemotherapy. Given the convenience and ease of use, multisensory stimulation has good potential for application in clinical practice.

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