Sunday, July 12, 2009

Brain & Behavior

Music as Medicine for the Brain

Neurologists like Oliver Sacks are prescribing it for conditions from Parkinson's and Alzheimer's to stroke and depression

Posted July 17, 2008

Rande Davis Gedaliah's 2003 diagnosis of Parkinson's was followed by leg spasms, balance problems, difficulty walking, and ultimately a serious fall in the shower. But something remarkable happened when the 60-year-old public speaking coach turned to an oldies station on her shower radio: She could move her leg with ease, her balance improved, and, she couldn't stop dancing. Now, she puts on her iPod and pumps in Springsteen's "Born in the U.S.A." when she wants to walk quickly; for a slower pace, Queen's "We Are the Champions" does the trick.

Video: Stroke, Explained
Video: Stroke, Explained

Music therapy has been practiced for decades as a way to treat neurological conditions from Parkinson's to Alzheimer's to anxiety and depression. Now, advances in neuroscience and brain imaging are revealing what's actually happening in the brain as patients listen to music or play instruments and why the therapy works. "It's been substantiated only in the last year or two that music therapy can help restore the loss of expressive language in patients with aphasia" following brain injury from stroke, says Oliver Sacks, the noted neurologist and professor at Columbia University, who explored the link between music and the brain in his recent book Musicophilia. Beyond improving movement and speech, he says, music can trigger the release of mood-altering brain chemicals and once-lost memories and emotions.

Parkinson's and stroke patients benefit, neurologists believe, because the human brain is innately attuned to respond to highly rhythmic music; in fact, says Sacks, our nervous system is unique among mammals in its automatic tendency to go into foot-tapping mode. In Parkinson's patients with bradykinesia, or difficulty initiating movement, it's thought that the music triggers networks of neurons to translate the cadence into organized movement. "We see patients develop something like an auditory timing mechanism," says Concetta Tomaino, cofounder of the Institute for Music and Neurologic Function in New York City. "Someone who is frozen can immediately release and begin walking. Or if they have balance problems, they can coordinate their steps to synchronize with the music," improving their gait and stride. Slow rhythms can ease the muscle bursts and jerky motions of Parkinson's patients with involuntary tremors.

Actually playing music, which requires coordinating muscle movements and developing an ear for timing, can also bring dramatic results, says Rick Bausman, a musician and the founder and director of the Martha's Vineyard-based Drum Workshop. The workshop uses traditional drum ensembles, in which groups of participants play percussion pieces, as one form of therapy for patients with a variety of cognitive and physical disabilities, including Parkinson's disease. Bausman teaches participants to play along with traditional Afro-Caribbean beats like the Haitian kongo and Cuban bembe using congas, bongos, and djun-djun drums. "Participants report that their control of physical movement improves after playing the drums, their motion becomes more fluid, they don't shake quite as much, and their tremors seem to calm down," says Bausman.

Reader Comments

Music=Food for Soul

I am an absolute music addict.

I listen to just about any type of music out there... Ambiance, Rock, Jazz, Rap, Oldies, Classical, Country, Electronic, World/Tribal, some Pop, Blues, New Age--You name it, I've heard it. I love it all and I listen to it all every day! I have done some research on the Art and Music Therapy, so I was delighted when my husband pointed me to this article. It pretty much sums up what I feel that I already knew in my head. I view music as a physical vibration with no boundaries or hold-backs. It crosses all communication and language barriers, and it can build up your emotions and then drop them to smolders with the change of a beat. I think it is one of the wonderful ways to cross cultural/racial/ethnic barriers.

I have been studying Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD) and Dyslexia over the past few months. ADD is a disorder characterized by lack of prolonged focus on something and difficulty with organization and time-management. Dyslexia is a condition where language difficulties surface in reading/writing skills. Dyslexics use their right brain far more than their left brain to process language, making difficulties for letter/word encoding. Music and art can assist in therapy and remediation for both of these disorders. People with Dyslexia respond well to music and art, which are processed in the creative right-brain. Music also has a calming and rhythmic steadiness, giving people with ADD a way to "think along" with the music. Singing or playing instruments can also refine people with these disabilities, giving them a different approach to how they use words, numbers, and notes.

Right vrs left and music

As an unschooled or trained individual, I have been emoting music on a keyboard/synthesizer for 30 years. I made my first album in 1977 and I discovered that music without rythmn had its own effect. It seemed to enhance concentration. After John Lenon was assasinated, I decided I did not want to fool with peoples' brains.

Music is everythning !!!

Good fine music from all walks of life is like recharging your whole mind ...you read poetry and with it you can hear music just from power and sonic value of the words...very few in this world can catch this melodys ...I try to do this for many years some original piano works you can hear here:

www.download.com/oleksaobriy

My Mom 81,got many mini strokes...she can't speak or write but she still enjoy playing piano in nursing home...it is much harder to play with left hand...to my suprise she plays only with left hand now.

Some music will make you sick out right...esp.Rap with bad words or all sorts of hard rock to promote hateness and destruction....

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