Friday, March 20, 2026

REHABSCAN - Measurable Monitoring and Restorative Care (DRAFT)


Redefining Cancer Recovery through Diagnostic Intelligence

Cancer treatment saves lives—but survival is only the beginning.

For millions of patients worldwide, the journey after chemotherapy, radiation, surgery, or immunotherapy is marked not by recovery, but by a new and often overwhelming set of chronic conditions. These are not incidental side effects. They are measurable, evolving physiological disruptions that affect nearly every system of the body.

RehabScan™ is designed to meet this moment.

It is a next-generation, imaging-supported rehabilitation ecosystem that introduces objective diagnostics into the recovery phase of cancer care, transforming rehabilitation from generalized protocols into precision-guided restoration.



The Problem: Invisible Damage after Treatment

Modern oncology has made tremendous strides in early detection and life-saving therapies. However, survivorship care remains fragmented, reactive, and largely subjective.

Patients frequently report symptoms such as:

  • Persistent fatigue
  • Cognitive decline (“chemo brain”)
  • Neuropathy and chronic pain
  • Cardiovascular dysfunction
  • Hormonal disruption
  • Lymphedema and swelling
  • Gastrointestinal instability
  • Emotional and psychological distress

Yet, in many cases, these symptoms are assessed through patient reporting alone—without quantitative imaging or measurable tracking systems.

This creates a dangerous gap:

What cannot be seen cannot be properly managed.

RehabScan™ closes this gap by introducing real-time, non-invasive diagnostic imaging as the foundation of rehabilitation.


What is RehabScan™?

RehabScan™ is a comprehensive imaging-integrated rehabilitation platform designed to:

  • Establish baseline physiological mapping post-treatment
  • Monitor tissue, vascular, neurological, and metabolic changes in real time
  • Guide targeted rehabilitation protocols across multiple disciplines
  • Track progress, regression, and response to therapy objectively

It represents a shift from:

  • Symptom-based rehab → Data-driven rehab
  • Generalized recovery → Personalized restoration
  • Delayed intervention → Early detection of dysfunction


Core Philosophy: “Scan Before You Treat—Then Track to Restore”

At the heart of RehabScan™ is a simple but transformative principle:

Every rehabilitation decision should be informed by measurable physiology.

Using advanced imaging modalities—including:

  • High-resolution ultrasound
  • Doppler vascular imaging
  • Elastography (tissue stiffness mapping)
  • Thermography (inflammatory patterns)
  • Functional neurological imaging (when applicable)

RehabScan™ provides a dynamic window into the body’s recovery process.


The RehabScan™ Baseline: Starting with “Chemo Brain”

One of the most under-recognized yet debilitating post-treatment conditions is chemotherapy-induced cognitive impairment, commonly referred to as “chemo brain.”

Patients experience:

  • Memory lapses
  • Difficulty concentrating
  • Reduced processing speed
  • Executive dysfunction

RehabScan™ introduces the concept of a Cognitive Baseline Scan, integrating:

  • Cerebral blood flow analysis (via Doppler imaging)
  • Neurovascular coupling indicators
  • Retinal and ocular vascular imaging (as a proxy for brain health)
  • QEEG and complementary neuro-assessment tools

This allows clinicians to:

  • Identify functional deficits early
  • Correlate symptoms with objective vascular or neurological changes
  • Design targeted cognitive rehabilitation protocols
  • Track recovery longitudinally


Multi-System Impact of Cancer Therapy: The RehabScan™ Framework

Cancer treatments affect nearly every biological system. RehabScan™ organizes rehabilitation into structured domains, each supported by imaging.


1. NEUROLOGICAL & COGNITIVE REHABILITATION

Chemotherapy-induced neurotoxicity can lead to:

  • Peripheral neuropathy (tingling, numbness, pain)
  • Cognitive dysfunction (“chemo brain”)
  • Motor coordination issues

RehabScan™ Applications:

  • Peripheral nerve imaging (ultrasound)
  • Microvascular flow analysis
  • Neuromuscular function tracking
  • Brain-adjacent vascular assessments

This enables precision-guided therapies such as:

  • Neuromodulation
  • Targeted physical therapy
  • Cognitive rehabilitation training

2. CARDIOVASCULAR & PULMONARY MONITORING

Cancer therapies can induce:

  • Heart failure
  • Arrhythmias
  • Coronary artery disease
  • Pulmonary fibrosis
  • Increased risk of blood clots (DVT)

RehabScan™ integrates:

  • Echocardiographic monitoring
  • Vascular Doppler for clot detection
  • Lung tissue imaging for fibrosis
  • Circulatory efficiency tracking

This allows for:

  • Early intervention before clinical decline
  • Safe exercise prescription
  • Cardiopulmonary rehabilitation optimization

3. HEMATOLOGICAL & SYSTEMIC RECOVERY

Post-treatment patients frequently face:

  • Neutropenia (infection risk)
  • Anemia (fatigue, weakness)
  • Thrombocytopenia (bleeding risk)
  • Cachexia (muscle wasting)

RehabScan™ Approach:

  • Tissue oxygenation tracking
  • Muscle mass and density imaging
  • Microcirculation analysis
  • Integration with lab biomarkers

This supports:

  • Nutritional intervention planning
  • Energy restoration strategies
  • Muscle rebuilding programs



4. ENDOCRINE & REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH

Cancer treatments often disrupt hormonal balance, leading to:

  • Infertility
  • Early menopause
  • Thyroid dysfunction
  • Osteoporosis

RehabScan™ integrates:

  • Thyroid and endocrine imaging
  • Bone density tracking (via imaging proxies and scans)
  • Hormonal biomarker correlation

This enables:

  • Precision hormone management
  • Bone preservation strategies
  • Fertility pathway guidance

 

5. LYMPHATIC & STRUCTURAL RECOVERY

Lymphedema and tissue disruption are common after surgery and radiation.

RehabScan™ supports:

  • Lymphatic flow visualization
  • Tissue fluid mapping
  • Monitoring of swelling and fibrosis

Guiding:

  • Compression therapy
  • Manual lymphatic drainage
  • Targeted physical therapy

6. Gastrointestinal, Skin & Whole-Body Recovery

Patients may experience:

  • Chronic GI dysfunction
  • Malnutrition
  • Skin and nail damage
  • Systemic inflammation

RehabScan™ Approach:

  • Abdominal and vascular imaging
  • Inflammatory pattern detection (thermography)
  • Nutritional status correlation

 

 



Integrated Rehabilitation Services (Powered by Imaging)

RehabScan™ is not a single modality—it is a hub that connects all rehabilitation disciplines through shared data:

  • Physical Therapy → Movement guided by musculoskeletal imaging
  • Occupational Therapy → Functional recovery mapped to real deficits
  • Speech & Swallow Therapy → Imaging-supported assessment
  • Cognitive Rehabilitation → Brain-function tracking
  • Nutrition Counseling → Metabolic and tissue feedback
  • Psychological Services → Correlated with physiological recovery
  • Vocational Rehab → Objective readiness metrics
  • Integrative Medicine → Measurable outcomes from therapies like acupuncture, PEMF, or laser

The Power of Longitudinal Tracking

RehabScan™ introduces something rarely seen in rehabilitation:

Continuous, visualized recovery data over time

Patients and clinicians can see:

  • Where dysfunction started
  • How it is evolving
  • What interventions are working
  • When adjustments are needed

This transforms rehabilitation into a living, adaptive system rather than a fixed protocol.


Why RehabScan™ Matters Now

We are entering a new era of medicine:

  • Survivorship is increasing
  • Chronic post-treatment conditions are rising
  • Patients demand better quality of life—not just survival

RehabScan™ aligns with:

  • Precision medicine
  • Preventative care
  • Integrative health
  • Value-based healthcare models

The Vision

RehabScan™ is more than a program.

It is a movement to redefine recovery.

A system where:

  • Every patient has a measurable baseline
  • Every therapy is guided by evidence
  • Every outcome is tracked
  • Every survivor is supported with clarity, not guesswork


Closing Statement

Cancer treatment may end—but recovery is an ongoing process that deserves the same level of sophistication, technology, and attention as diagnosis and therapy.

RehabScan™ ensures that no aspect of recovery is left unseen, unmeasured, or unmanaged. It brings light to the invisible.And in doing so, it restores not just function—but confidence, independence, and quality of life.

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Cancer Care Spotlight: CHRISTOPHER FITZMAURICE (DRAFT ONLY)

Redefining Cancer Care through Exercise Oncology


In today’s rapidly evolving healthcare landscape, innovation is no longer confined to pharmaceuticals, surgical techniques, or diagnostic breakthroughs. Increasingly, a powerful yet often underutilized tool is gaining recognition within oncology: exercise as medicine. At the forefront of this movement is Christopher Fitzmaurice, MS, CEP, CSCS, CET, a clinical exercise physiologist at the University of Miami Health System whose work is helping reshape how cancer patients and survivors approach recovery, resilience, and long-term health.

With credentials that span clinical exercise physiology, strength and conditioning, and cancer-specific training, Fitzmaurice represents a new generation of healthcare professionals bridging performance science with medical care. As a Certified Cancer Exercise Trainer (CET) and Certified Strength & Conditioning Specialist (CSCS), his expertise lies not only in optimizing physical performance, but in translating that knowledge into meaningful, life-enhancing outcomes for individuals navigating one of the most challenging diagnoses imaginable.

 

From Clinical Practice to Purpose-Driven Mission

Currently working within the executive health and concierge medicine program at the University of Miami, Fitzmaurice’s journey was shaped by his earlier tenure at the Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center, where he spent several years working directly with cancer patients and survivors. It was here that his professional path evolved into a mission.

“My mission is to make exercise the standard of care—not just for some, but for all, and especially for cancer survivors.”  While many practitioners enter oncology through traditional clinical routes, Fitzmaurice’s perspective was informed by both personal and professional experiences. Having lost family members to cancer, he carried a personal connection to the disease. However, it was his hands-on clinical exposure that crystallized his purpose.

“I’ve always been connected to cancer through family, but I didn’t become truly passionate until I started working directly with patients and saw the need firsthand.”

 

Exercise Oncology: From Concept to Clinical Reality

Exercise oncology has undergone a remarkable transformation over the past decade. Once viewed as supplementary or optional, it is now supported by a growing body of evidence demonstrating its clinical value. Fitzmaurice has been both a witness to and a contributor within this expanding field. “We’ve seen an explosion in randomized clinical trials—nearly a 300% increase—showing how exercise can dramatically impact cancer survivors.”

These studies have revealed that structured exercise can reduce treatment-related side effects, improve cardiovascular and muscular function, enhance mental well-being, and support overall quality of life. More importantly, exercise is now being examined not just as recovery, but as a therapeutic intervention throughout the cancer journey.

 

Beyond Rehabilitation: A Continuum of Care

Historically, physical rehabilitation in oncology was largely reactive—focused on helping patients recover from surgery or treatment-related impairments. Fitzmaurice is part of a growing movement that challenges this limited framework. “Exercise is no longer just something we think about after treatment. We now understand its value during treatment and even before it—what we call prehabilitation.”

This shift introduces a continuum of care: exercise before treatment to build resilience, during treatment to maintain function, and after treatment to support recovery and long-term health. “Rehabilitation helps treat the burden of disease, but exercise helps maintain function and improve outcomes over time.”

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Fitzmaurice expanded this model through telehealth, delivering both individual and group-based exercise programs to patients who were otherwise isolated from care. “The impact wasn’t just physical—it was mental as well. You could see how much it meant for patients to stay active and engaged.”

 

Advocacy and Addressing Hidden Challenges

Courtesy of: Scott Baker

Beyond clinical application, Fitzmaurice is also an advocate—particularly in areas where stigma or lack of awareness can hinder care. One such area is male breast cancer, a condition often overlooked or underreported. Through his work with cancer survivors, he has observed how denial and social perceptions can delay diagnosis and treatment. “The most important thing is not to be in denial. When people avoid acknowledging a diagnosis, they miss the opportunity to access the care and support that could help them.”

He emphasizes that survivorship programs and supportive care models must be inclusive and accessible to all patients. “We need to create a space where everyone feels included—especially men—because the rates are rising, and the need is real.”

 

Collaboration and Leadership in a Growing Field

Fitzmaurice’s work is strengthened by his collaborations with leading voices in oncology and exercise science, including Dr. Jay Harness, a former oncologic surgeon who has become a strong advocate for exercise-based interventions in cancer care.

Their partnership reflects a powerful convergence of clinical oncology and performance science. “When I learned about Dr. Harness’s history—over 30 years as an oncologist—and his commitment to exercise oncology, it opened my eyes to how impactful this field can be.” Together, they are contributing to publications and initiatives aimed at advancing exercise as a recognized and standardized component of cancer care.

 

The Future: Research, Education, and Systemic Change

Looking ahead, Fitzmaurice is committed to further advancing the field through research and education. He plans to pursue a PhD with a focus on exercise oncology, with the goal of strengthening the scientific foundation that supports its integration into clinical practice. “I want to help build the evidence that ensures cancer survivors receive the level of care they deserve—and that practitioners know how to implement exercise properly.”

His long-term vision is clear: to influence healthcare systems, inform clinical guidelines, and ensure that exercise is no longer considered optional, but essential.

 

A New Standard in Cancer Care

Christopher Fitzmaurice embodies a shift in modern medicine—one that prioritizes proactive, integrative, and patient-centered care. With a unique blend of clinical expertise and human insight, he is helping to redefine the role of movement in oncology.

In his model, exercise is not an afterthought. It is a strategy. A therapy. A lifeline. As research continues to validate what practitioners like Fitzmaurice have long understood, the future of cancer care will increasingly embrace this approach—where healing is not only delivered through treatment, but cultivated through movement, strength, and resilience.

And in that future, exercise will not simply support recovery—it will help define it.



 


Aftermath

On Exercise as a Clinical Ally in Cancer Recovery

By Robert L. Bard, MD, DABR, FAIUM, FASLMS

As a diagnostic imaging specialist, my role has always centered on identifying disease—locating it, defining it, and understanding its behavior. But over the years, one of the most important realizations in oncology has been this: detection is only the beginning. What follows—how the body responds, heals, and adapts—defines the patient’s true outcome.

In this context, exercise has emerged as one of the most valuable yet historically underutilized tools in cancer care.

From a clinical standpoint, cancer and its treatments impose a profound physiological burden. Chemotherapy, radiation, and surgical interventions often leave patients with decreased muscle mass, impaired circulation, chronic inflammation, and significant fatigue. These are not secondary issues—they directly influence recovery, resilience, and long-term survival.

What professionals like Christopher Fitzmaurice are advancing through exercise oncology is a critical shift in how we approach this recovery phase. Exercise is not simply about fitness. It is about restoring function at a cellular and systemic level.

We now understand that structured physical activity improves vascular circulation, enhances oxygen delivery, and supports lymphatic flow—key mechanisms that help the body clear metabolic waste and reduce inflammatory burden. From an imaging perspective, we often correlate improved blood flow with better tissue health and recovery potential. Movement, quite literally, fuels healing.

Equally important is the role of exercise in preserving muscle integrity and metabolic stability. Loss of strength is one of the most overlooked consequences of cancer treatment, yet it is directly tied to a patient’s independence and long-term prognosis. Rebuilding that strength is not cosmetic—it is foundational to survival.

There is also a neurological component that cannot be ignored. Physical activity stimulates neurochemical pathways associated with mood, cognition, and resilience. Patients who engage in structured exercise programs frequently demonstrate improved mental clarity and emotional stability—factors that are essential when navigating the psychological weight of a cancer diagnosis.

From a rehabilitation standpoint, exercise bridges the gap between treatment and true recovery. Traditional rehab often addresses isolated impairments, but exercise provides a global, integrative benefit—supporting cardiovascular, musculoskeletal, and neurological systems simultaneously.

Courtesy of Scott Baker

Most importantly, exercise introduces agency back into the patient experience. Cancer treatment can often feel passive—patients receive therapies, undergo procedures, and wait for results. Exercise shifts that dynamic. It gives patients an active role in their own recovery, reinforcing both physical capability and psychological empowerment.

As we look toward the future of oncology, it is clear that multidisciplinary collaboration will define the highest standard of care. Imaging, medical treatment, rehabilitation, and performance science must work together—not in silos, but as an integrated system.

Exercise oncology is not an alternative concept. It is a necessary evolution.



 

REHABSCAN - Measurable Monitoring and Restorative Care (DRAFT)

Redefining Cancer Recovery through Diagnostic Intelligence Cancer treatment saves lives—but survival is only the beginning. For millions ...