Lung cancer is the second cause of death resulted from cancer among women. The aim
of this study was investigating the effect of endurance swimming on Epidermal Growth
Factor receptor gene expression (EGFR gene expression) of lung tissue in female rats
during Nicotine-Derived Nitrosamines Ketone injection. Therefore, twenty six female
Wistar rats, 6-8 weeks old with an average body weight of 102±27 g, after familiarity
with the laboratory and water were divided into 5 groups of control, saline, exercise,
carcinogen and exercise-carcinogen. Gradually, 25 minutes swimming exercise reached
to 60 minutes (5 sessions per week) in the final week. Exercise overload, reached from 4
to 10 liters per minute, based on pool water flow. Subcutaneous injection of carcinogens
was also administered once a week at a dose of 12.5 mg / Kg. At the end, after extraction
from rats' lung tissue, evaluation of this receptor's gene expression was done by RealTime
PCR. Data analyze were performed by one-way ANOVA and Tukey's post hoc test
(α≤0.05). The results revealed that 12 weeks of swimming and carcinogenic injection,
respectively, resulted in significant increase and insignificant decrease of EGFR gene
expression (P=0.003, P=0.17); while, gene expression of exercise-carcinogenic group in
comparison with the controls had no significant difference (P=0.65). In general, it seems
that endurance exercise protocol with designated intensity has been safe, and can
contribute improving lung structure by increasing EGFR levels, without exacerbating
carcinogenic inflammation, and by reducing the apoptosis of healthy cells, providing
hypoxic conditions, and inducing angiogenesis.