Abstract

The objective of the present research is to explore the temperature diffusion in healthy and cancerous tissues, with a specific focus on how physical activity impacts on the weakening of breast tumors. Previous research lacked numerical analysis regarding the effectiveness of physical activity in tumor prevention or attenuation, prompting an investigation into the mechanism behind physical activity and tumor prevention from a bio-heat transfer perspective. The study employs a realistic model of human breasts and tumors in COMSOL Multiphysics® to analyze temperature distribution by utilizing Penne's bio-heat equation. The research examines their influence on tissue temperature by varying tumor diameter (10–20 mm) and exercise intensities (such as walking speeds and other activities like carpentry, swimming, and marathon running). Results demonstrate that cancerous tissues generate notably more heat than normal tissues at rest and during physical activity. Smaller tumors exhibit higher temperatures during exercise, emphasizing the significance of tumor size in treatment effectiveness. Tumor temperatures range between 40 and 43.2 °C, while healthy tissue temperatures remain below 41 °C during physical activity. High-intensity exercises, particularly swimming, walking at 1.8 m/s, and marathon running, display a therapeutic effect on tumors, increasing effectiveness with intensity. The temperatures of healthy and malignant tissues rise noticeably due to constant metabolic heat and decreased blood flow. The study also identifies the optimal duration of high-intensity exercise, recommending at least 20 min for optimal therapeutic outcomes. The outcomes of this research would help individuals, doctors, and cancer researchers understand and weaken malignant tissues.

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