The effect of recorded music on pain endurance (CRESCENDo) - A randomized controlled trial
Journal
Complementary Therapies in Medicine
Year
2023
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Clarifying the effect of music on pain endurance in an experimental design could aid in how music should be applied during both surgical and non-surgical interventions. This study aims to investigate the effect of music on pain endurance and the involvement of the sympathetic adrenomedullary axis (SAM) and the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical axis (HPA). MATERIALS AND METHODS: In this randomized controlled trial all participants received increasing electric stimuli through their non-dominant index finger. Participants were randomly assigned to the music group (M) receiving a 20-minute music intervention or control group (C) receiving a 20-minute resting period. The primary outcome was pain endurance, defined as amount milliampere tolerated. Secondary outcomes included anxiety level, SAM-axis based on heart rate variability (HRV) and salivary alpha-amylase, and HPA-axis activity based on salivary cortisol. RESULTS: In the intention-to-treat analysis, the effect of music on pain tolerance did not statistically differ between the M and C group. A significant positive effect of music on pain endurance was noted after excluding participants with a high skin impedance (p = 0.013, CI 0.35; 2.85). Increased HRV was observed in the M-group compared to the C-group for SDNN (B/95%CI:13.80/2.22;25.39, p = 0.022), RMSSD (B/95%CI:15.97/1.64;30.31, p = 0.032), VLF (B/95%CI:212.08/60.49;363.67, p = 0.008) and HF (B/95%CI:821.15/150.78;1491.52, p = 0.0190). No statistical significance was observed in other secondary outcomes. CONCLUSIONS: The effect of the music intervention on pain endurance was not statistically significant in the intention-to-treat analysis. The subgroup analyses revealed an increase in pain endurance in the music group after correcting for skin impedance, which could be attributed to increased parasympathetic activation.
Music and Health Institute Terms
Pain; Procedural Pain; Pain Management and Control; Pain Tolerance; Physiological Methods; Subjective Measures; Music Medicine; Music Listening; Recorded Music Listening
Indexed Terms
Anxiety; Pain; Stress; Heart Rate; Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical axis; Pain endurance; Pain Threshold; Tolerance
Study Type
Randomized Controlled Trial; Quantitative Methods
PubMed ID
37579996
Document Type
Article
Recommended Citation
Billar, R., Kappen, P., Mohammadian, S., van den Berg, C., de Rijke, Y., van den Akker, E., van Rosmalen, J., Schnater, J. M., Vincent, A., Dirven, C., Klimek, M., Wijnen, R., Jeekel, J., Huygen, F., & Tiemensma, J. (2023). The effect of recorded music on pain endurance (CRESCENDo) - A randomized controlled trial. Complementary Therapies in Medicine, 77, 102969. Retrieved from https://remix.berklee.edu/mhi-citations/759