But I bet your doctor will do nothing with
this having done nothing for over a decade. I tried getting my Mom to
play big band CDs for my Dad's Parkinsons dementia but since I live two
states away that was technically not possible for my Mom to accomplish.
Yes,
I'm assuming this is transferable to all pre-dementia patients,
including
preventing dementia amongst stroke survivors. Can your doctor make that
same leap? If your stroke hospital has done nothing in the last decade
you don't have a stroke hospital, why haven't you fired the board of
directors?
Article type: Research Article
Authors: Fischer, Corinne E.a; d; * | Churchill, Nathana; 1 | Leggieri, Melissaa; d | Vuong, Veronicab; d | Tau, Michaelc | Fornazzari, Luis R.c | Thaut, Michael H.b; d; 2 | Schweizer, Tom A.a; d; 2
Affiliations:
[a] St. Michael’s Hospital, Keenan Research Centre for Biomedical Science, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, Toronto, ON, Canada
|
[b] University
of Toronto, Faculty of Music, Music and Health Science Research
Collaboratory, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada
|
[c] Department of Psychiatry, St. Michaels Hospital, Toronto ON, Canada
|
[d] Institute of Medical Sciences, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada
Correspondence:
[*]
Correspondence to: Corinne E. Fischer, MD, Keenan
Research Centre for Biomedical Science, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute,
St. Michaels Hospital, Room 17044 cc Wing, 30 Bond St., Toronto,
Ontario, M5B 1W8, Canada. Tel.: +1 416 864 6060 /Ext 2680; E-mail: Corinne.Fischer@unityhealth.to.
Note: [1] Co-primary author.
Note: [2] Co-senior authors.
Abstract:
Background:
Repeated
exposure to long-known music has been shown to have a beneficial effect
on cognitive performance in patients with AD. However, the brain
mechanisms underlying improvement in cognitive performance are not yet
clear. Objective:In this pilot study we propose to examine the effect of
repeated long-known music exposure on imaging indices and corresponding
changes in cognitive function in patients with early-stage cognitive
decline.
Methods:
Participants with early-stage cognitive decline were
assigned to three weeks of daily long-known music listening, lasting one
hour in duration. A cognitive battery was administered, and brain
activity was measured before and after intervention. Paired-measures
tests evaluated the longitudinal changes in brain structure, function,
and cognition associated with the intervention.
Results:
Fourteen
participants completed the music-based intervention, including 6
musicians and 8 non-musicians. Post-baseline there was a reduction in
brain activity in key nodes of a music-related network, including the
bilateral basal ganglia and right inferior frontal gyrus, and declines
in fronto-temporal functional connectivity and radial diffusivity of
dorsal white matter. Musician status also significantly modified
longitudinal changes in functional and structural brain measures. There
was also a significant improvement in the memory subdomain of the
Montreal Cognitive Assessment.
Conclusion:
These preliminary results
suggest that neuroplastic mechanisms may mediate improvements in
cognitive functioning associated with exposure to long-known music
listening and that these mechanisms may be different in musicians
compared to non-musicians.
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease, cognitive reserve, functional MRI, imaging, MRI, music
DOI: 10.3233/JAD-210610
Journal: Journal of Alzheimer's Disease, vol. 84, no. 2, pp. 819-833, 2021
Accepted 1 September 2021
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Published: 09 November 2021
Price: EUR 27.50
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