Sonification of Arm Movements in Stroke Rehabilitation - a Novel Approach in Neurologic Music Therapy
Journal
Frontiers in Neurology
Year
2016
Abstract
Gross motor impairments are common after stroke, but efficient and motivating therapies for these impairments are scarce. We present an innovative musical sonification therapy, especially designed to retrain patients' gross motor functions. Sonification should motivate patients and provide additional sensory input informing about relative limb position. Twenty-five stroke patients were included in a clinical pre-post study and took part in the sonification training. The patients' upper extremity functions, their psychological states, and their arm movement smoothness were assessed pre and post training. Patients were randomly assigned to either of two groups. Both groups received an average of 10 days (M = 9.88; SD = 2.03; 30 min/day) of musical sonification therapy [music group (MG)] or a sham sonification movement training [control group (CG)], respectively. The only difference between the two protocols was that in the CG no sound was played back during training. In the beginning, patients explored the acoustic effects of their arm movements in space. At the end of the training, the patients played simple melodies by coordinated arm movements. The 15 patients in the MG showed significantly reduced joint pain (F = 19.96, p < 0.001) in the Fugl-Meyer assessment after training. They also reported a trend to have improved hand function in the stroke impact scale as compared to the CG. Movement smoothness at day 1, day 5, and the last day of the intervention was compared in MG patients and found to be significantly better after the therapy. Taken together, musical sonification may be a promising therapy for motor impairments after stroke, but further research is required since estimated effect sizes point to moderate treatment outcomes.
Music and Health Institute Terms
Elderly; Mobility; Music Medicine; Pain; Pain Management and Control; Stroke; Subjective Measures; Symptom Management
Indexed Terms
arm movement; cerebrovascular accident; motor dysfunction; musical sonification therapy; Elderly; arm movement smoothness; arthralgia; clinical article; controlled study; EMBASE keywords; Fugl Meyer Joint pain score; human; mental health; musculoskeletal system parameters; neurologic disease assessment; pain assessment; randomized controlled trial; stroke impact scale
Study Type
Randomized Controlled; Trial; Quantitative Methods
Document Type
Article
Recommended Citation
Scholz, D. S., Rohde, S., Nikmaram, N., Bruckner, H. P., Grobbach, M., Rollnik, J. D., & Altenmuller, E. O. (2016). Sonification of Arm Movements in Stroke Rehabilitation - a Novel Approach in Neurologic Music Therapy. Frontiers in Neurology, 7 (JUN) Retrieved from https://remix.berklee.edu/mhi-citations/1638