| Literature DB >> 30930728 |
Melissa Leggieri1,2, Michael H Thaut3, Luis Fornazzari1,4, Tom A Schweizer1,2,5, Joseph Barfett1,6, David G Munoz1,2,7, Corinne E Fischer1,2,8.
Abstract
Music interventions have been widely adopted as a potential non-pharmacological therapy for patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) to treat cognitive and/or behavioral symptoms of the disease. In spite of the prevalence of such therapies, evidence for their effectiveness report mixed results in the literature. The purpose of this narrative review is to investigate the effectiveness of various intervention strategies (music therapy vs. music listening techniques) and music type used in the intervention (individualized vs. non-individualized music) on cognitive and behavioral outcomes for persons with AD. Databases were searched for studies using either active music therapy or music listening techniques over the last 10 years. These studies were in English, included persons with AD dementia, and whose protocol gathered pre- and post-intervention outcome measures. We initially identified 206 papers which were then reduced to 167 after removing duplicates. Further review yielded 13 papers which were extensively reviewed, resulting in a final sample of six papers. Our analysis of these papers suggested that, regardless of the music intervention approach, individualized music regimens provided the best outcomes for the patient. Furthermore, music listening may act as a relaxation technique and therefore provide a long-term impact for the patient, while active music therapy may acts to engage participants through social interaction and provide acute benefits. Our findings suggest that music techniques can be utilized in various ways to improve behavior and cognition.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; cognitive function; music listening; music therapy; music-based intervention
Year: 2019 PMID: 30930728 PMCID: PMC6424022 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2019.00132
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Studies investigating music interventions for AD.
| Study | Participants | Music intervention length | Music intervention method | Outcome measures | Summary of Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Probable mild to moderate AD (MMSE > 15). | 12-weeks, including two 25 min group sessions per week | Active music therapy | Measures taken at beginning and end of intervention (Week 1 and week 12). Follow up 3 months after intervention completion | ||
| Probable mild to moderate AD (CDR = 1–2) | 6-weeks, including two 45 min group sessions per week | Active music therapy | Measures taken at 3 and 6 weeks. No follow up. | ||
| Mild AD (CDR = 0.5∼1) | 24-weeks, including seven 1 h sessions per week (divided into 30 min in morning and 30 min at night) | Music listening | Measures taken at baseline and at 6 months. No follow up. | ||
| Mild-moderate AD (average MMSE of 19) | 12 weeks, including three 2–4 min sessions per week | Measures then 1–2 weeks before and 1–2 weeks after MBI completion. No Follow up. | |||
| Severe AD (CDR = 3) | 10 weeks, including one 30-min session per week | Active and music listening | Measures taken 2 weeks before study and at MBI completion. Follow up 3 weeks after MBI completion | ||
| Mild-moderate AD (MMSE 12–25) | 16 weeks, including one 20-min session per week | Music listening | Measures taken at MBI initiation, 4, 8, and 16 weeks. Follow up 8 weeks after MBI completion | ||