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"Long
before it's in the papers" RETURN TO THE WORLD SCIENCE HOME PAGE Music may aid stroke recovery Feb. 19, 2008 Hearing music in the early stages after a stroke can improve patients’ recovery, according to preliminary research published online Feb. 20 in the medical journal
Brain. A diagram of principal
blood vessels in and leading to the brain, as would be seen from the front of the
face. A stroke occurs when a blockage or rupture of a vessel leads to a
shortage of oxygen in part of the brain. (Image courtesy Livermore Nat'l
Laboratory)
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Hearing music in the early stages after a stroke can improve patients’ recovery, according to preliminary research published online Feb. 20 in the medical journal Brain. Scientists found that if stroke patients listened to music for two hours a day, their verbal memory and focused attention recovered better. It’s the first time such an effect has been shown in humans, the investigators said. They compared stroke patients who listened to music with patients given either nothing, or audio books to listen to. Music may offer “a valuable addition to the patients’ care—especially if other active forms of rehabilitation are not yet feasible,” said Teppo Särkämö, the study’s lead author. Särkämö, a doctoral student at the University of Helsinki, Finland, and at the Helsinki Brain Research Centre, focused on patients who had suffered a stroke of an artery known as the middle cerebral, in the right or left side of the brain. Särkämö and colleagues said they started their study subjects on listening regimens as soon as possible after their surgeries. “The brain can undergo dramatic changes during the first weeks and months of recovery,” Särkämö said. “These changes can be enhanced by stimulation from the environment.” Most patients had problems with movement and thinking processes such as attention and memory, he added. The researchers randomly assigned them to hear music, audio books or nothing, in addition to standard rehabilitation. Patients in the first two groups were allowed to pick their own music or audio books. The researchers followed and assessed the patients for up to six months; 54 patients completed the study. “Three months after the stroke, verbal memory improved from the first week post-stroke by 60 percent in music listeners, by 18 percent in audio book listeners and by 29 percent in non-listeners,” Särkämö said. “Focused attention—the ability to control and perform mental operations and resolve conflicts among responses—improved by 17 percent in music listeners,” but not at all among the others. These differences were about the same another three months later, Särkämö said; the music-listening patients were also less depressed and confused on average than non-listeners. The study is “promising but will have to be replicated and studied further… to better understand the underlying neural mechanisms,” he added. One limitation of the study was that the experimenters knew which patients were in which group. Thus it wasn’t the preferred sort of study, “double-blind,” in which evaulations take place without patients or researchers knowing any of that information. Music may not work for every patient, Särkämö cautioned, and it should be considered as a supplement rather than a replacement for other therapies. Recovering stroke patients typically spend about three-fourths of their daily time outside therapy, lying inactive, he said, so this may be a good time for music. The researchers suggested music might wield the beneficial effects by stimulating a brain system implicated in feelings of pleasure, reward, arousal, motivation and memory, known as the dopaminergic mesocorticolimbic system. Music might also stimulate the brain’s ability to repair and renew its wiring more generally, they added. |
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