Since your doctors and stroke hospital DID NOTHING ON EARLIER MUSIC RESEARCH, they are going to be fucking incompetent once again and DO NOTHING with this.
The latest here:
- 1Sorbonne Université, Inserm, CNRS, Laboratoire d'Imagerie Biomédicale, LIB, Paris, France
- 2Sorbonne Université, CNRS, Institut de
Recherche et de Coordination en Acoustique Musique (IRCAM), UMR Sciences
et Technologies de la Musique et du Son (STMS), Paris, France
- 3Physical Therapy Department, Holy Family University, Batroun, Lebanon
- 4Sorbonne Université, AP-HP, GRC n°24, Handicap Moteur et Cognitif & Réadaptation (HaMCRe), Paris, France
Music-based therapy for rehabilitation induces neuromodulation at the
brain level and improves the functional recovery. In line with this,
musical rhythmicity improves post-stroke gait. Moreover, an external
distractor also helps stroke patients to improve locomotion. We raised
the question whether music with irregular tempo (arrhythmic music), and
its possible influence on attention would induce neuromodulation and
improve the post-stroke gait. We tested music-induced neuromodulation at
the level of a propriospinal reflex, known to be particularly involved
in the control of stabilized locomotion; after stroke, the reflex is
enhanced on the hemiparetic side. The study was conducted in 12
post-stroke patients and 12 controls. Quadriceps EMG was conditioned by
electrical stimulation of the common peroneal nerve, which produces a
biphasic facilitation on EMG, reflecting the level of activity of the
propriospinal reflex between ankle dorsiflexors and quadriceps (CPQ
reflex). The CPQ reflex was tested during treadmill locomotion at the
preferred speed of each individual, in 3 conditions randomly alternated:
without music vs. 2 arrhythmic music tracks, including a pleasant
melody and unpleasant aleatory electronic sounds (AES); biomechanical
and physiological parameters were also investigated. The CPQ reflex was
significantly larger in patients during walking without sound, compared
to controls. During walking with music, irrespective of the theme, there
was no more difference between groups. In controls, music had no
influence on the size of CPQ reflex. In patients, CPQ reflex was
significantly larger during walking without sound than when listening to
the melody or AES. No significant differences have been revealed
concerning the biomechanical and the physiological parameters in both
groups. Arrhythmic music listening modulates the spinal excitability
during post-stroke walking, restoring the CPQ reflex activity to
normality. The plasticity was not accompanied by any clear improvement
of gait parameters, but the patients reported to prefer walking with
music than without. The role of music as external focus of attention is
discussed. This study has shown that music can modulate propriospinal
neural network particularly involved in the gait control during the
first training session. It is speculated that repetition may help to
consolidate plasticity and would contribute to gait recovery after
stroke.
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