| Literature DB >> 23801975 |
Phillip D Fletcher1, Laura E Downey, Pirada Witoonpanich, Jason D Warren.
Abstract
Musicophilia, or abnormal craving for music, is a poorly understood phenomenon that has been associated in particular with focal degeneration of the temporal lobes. Here we addressed the brain basis of musicophilia using voxel-based morphometry (VBM) on MR volumetric brain images in a retrospectively ascertained cohort of patients meeting clinical consensus criteria for frontotemporal lobar degeneration: of 37 cases ascertained, 12 had musicophilia, and 25 did not exhibit the phenomenon. The syndrome of semantic dementia was relatively over-represented among the musicophilic subgroup. A VBM analysis revealed significantly increased regional gray matter volume in left posterior hippocampus in the musicophilic subgroup relative to the non-musicophilic group (p < 0.05 corrected for regional comparisons); at a relaxed significance threshold (p < 0.001 uncorrected across the brain volume) musicophilia was associated with additional relative sparing of regional gray matter in other temporal lobe and prefrontal areas and atrophy of gray matter in posterior parietal and orbitofrontal areas. The present findings suggest a candidate brain substrate for musicophilia as a signature of distributed network damage that may reflect a shift of hedonic processing toward more abstract (non-social) stimuli, with some specificity for particular neurodegenerative pathologies.Entities:
Keywords: craving; degeneration; frontotemporal dementia; music; musicophilia
Year: 2013 PMID: 23801975 PMCID: PMC3689257 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00347
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Summary of patient demographic, clinical, and neuropsychological characteristics.
| Age (years) | 62 (6.9) | 64 (6.5) | n.s. |
| Education (years) | 12.6 (2.9) | 14.7 (3.1) | n.s. |
| Sex (F:M) | 6:6 | 8:17 | n.s. |
| Symptom duration (years) | 6.8 (2.5) | 5.0 (1.8) | 0.06 |
| Syndrome (no. of cases) | |||
| bvFTD | 5 | 14 | |
| SD | 7 | 11 | |
| IQ | |||
| WASI verbal | 66 (26) | 78.2 (23) | n.s. |
| WASI performance | 91 (16) | 86 (18) | n.s. |
| NART(/50) | 23 (14) | 24 (16) | n.s. |
| RMT words (/50) | 29 (4.5) | 33 (10.4) | n.s. |
| RMT faces (/50) | 30 (8.1) | 30 (8.3) | n.s. |
| BPVS (/150) | 69 (54.6) | 103 (47.2) | n.s. |
| Synonyms (/50) | 27 (10.1) | 36.6 (14.0) | n.s. |
| Stroop inhibition (seconds) | 92 (34.8) | 90 (34.9) | n.s. |
| Reverse digit span (max) | 3 (1.7) | 4 (1.7) | n.s. |
| TASIT emotion | 5 (2.8) | 7 (3.3) | n.s. |
| recognition (/14) | |||
| TASIT social inference (/36) | 17 (2.8) | 23 (5.0) | 0.004 |
| VOSP object decision | 14 (3.9) | 16 (3.4) | n.s. |
Mean (standard deviation) data are shown where appropriate. BPVS, British picture vocabulary scale; NART, national adult reading test; n.s., non-significant; RMT, recognition memory test; TASIT, the awareness of social inference test; VOSP; visual object and space perception battery; WASI, Wechsler abbreviated scale of intelligence.
Summary of changes in music listening in patient subgroups.
| Non-musicophilic | Questionnaire | No change |
| Questionnaire | Can only tolerate music for short periods now | |
| Used to like jazz and classical music, now cannot identify favorite singers | ||
| Listens to music less now | ||
| No interest in listening to music | ||
| Plays less music at home | ||
| Used to love to play CDs but never puts them on now | ||
| Care-giver interview | No change | |
| Musicophilic | Questionnaire | Loves all types of music more than he used to |
| Now loves singing and dancing along to songs she knows | ||
| Listens to music a lot more now | ||
| Listens to music a lot more now | ||
| Less interest in classical music but listens to music more, now favors 1970s rock from his youth | ||
| Listens endlessly to music on his i-pod but is sensitive to other noise such as children playing | ||
| Listens to music more than he used to and wears his i-pod all the time | ||
| Music makes her dance, it makes her want to dance and she likes listening to it more | ||
| Plays music louder, likes to play more music, sings along, listens to ABBA for hours now | ||
| Care-giver interview | Likes music more, plays the same song repeatedly and will dance to music at home by herself | |
| Developed a habit of singing along to music on CDs or television | ||
| Rekindled interest in music, started attending church and singing hymns |
Figure 1Statistical parametric maps of regions of significant gray matter preservation in the musicophilic relative to the non-musicophilic patient subgroup (shown at an uncorrected threshold . All gray matter correlates with cluster size >20 voxels are shown. SPMs are displayed on sagittal (above left), coronal (above right), and axial (below left) sections through the anterior temporal lobes from a canonical T1 weighted brain template image in Montreal Neurological Institute standard stereotactic space. The sagittal section is through the left cerebral hemisphere; the coronal section shows the left hemisphere on the left. Z scores are coded on the color bar (below right).
Summary of voxel-based morphometry findings.
| Musicophilic > non-musicophilic | Posterior hippocampus | L | −36 | −28 | −8 | 3.86 | 141 |
| Temporo-parietal junction | L | −44 | −49 | 36 | 3.87 | 36 | |
| Dorsolateral prefrontal cortex | R | 21 | 8 | 48 | 3.59 | 31 | |
| L | −21 | 12 | 45 | 3.49 | 37 | ||
| Anterior cingulate | L | −8 | 24 | 21 | 3.50 | 27 | |
| Parahippocampal gyrus | L | −33 | −45 | −15 | 3.38 | 56 | |
| Musicophilic < non-musicophilic | Posterior parietal cortex | R | 24 | −82 | 32 | 4.66 | 438 |
| L | −18 | −76 | 45 | 3.65 | 54 | ||
| Frontal pole | L | −6 | 69 | 12 | 4.10 | 217 | |
| R | 24 | 66 | −2 | 3.74 | 116 | ||
| Medial orbitofrontal cortex | L | −4 | 66 | −17 | 3.93 | 151 | |
| R | 22 | 64 | −14 | 3.50 | 59 | ||
| Dorsolateral prefrontal cortex | R | 36 | 56 | 24 | 3.69 | 67 | |
Cerebral gray matter regions significantly preserved (above) or atrophic (below) in the musicophilic subgroup relative to the non-musicophilic subgroup are listed with peak coordinates in Montreal Neurological Institute standard stereotactic space and associated cluster sizes. All gray matter correlates with cluster size >20 voxels are shown.
Significant at threshold p < 0.05 corrected for multiple comparisons within the prespecified anatomical small volume of interest (see text); other results significant at p < 0001 uncorrected over the whole brain volume.