Does Playing a Musical Instrument Reduce the Incidence of Cognitive Impairment and Dementia? a Systematic Review and Meta-analysis

Journal

Aging & Mental Health

Year

2021

Volume

25

Issue

4

First Page

593

Last Page

601

Abstract

Objectives: High levels of life course intellectually-stimulating activity are hypothesised to produce a cognitive reserve that mitigates against overt cognitive impairment in the face of neuropathology. Leisure-time musical instrument playing could be a viable source of that stimulation, but to date no systematic review has been undertaken to investigate the effect of musical instrument playing on the incidence of cognitive impairment and dementia.Methods: A systematic review and meta-analysis including any study with musical instrument playing as the exposure, and cognitive impairment and/or dementia as the outcome.Results: 1211 unduplicated articles were identified from literature searching, of which three articles were included: two cohort studies and one twin study. All studies were of good methodological quality, and reported large protective effects of musical instrument playing. The twin study reported that musicians were 64% less likely to develop mild cognitive impairment or dementia, after additionally adjusting for sex, education and physical activity. A meta-analysis of the cohort studies found a 59% reduction in the risk of developing dementia within the study follow up. The evidence base is limited by size, small sample sizes and the risk of reverse causality.Conclusion: The three identified studies that investigated the specific relationship of musical instrument playing and subsequent incidence of cognitive impairment and dementia all reported a large protective association. The results are encouraging but should be interpreted with caution. Larger, more focussed studies are required to further explore this association, with a particular need to consider the cumulative lifetime quantity of music playing.

Music and Health Institute Terms

Alzheimer's and Related Dementias; Cognitive Abilities; Memory; Neurodegenerative Disorders; Playing an Instrument; Psychological Outcomes; Recreative Music Methods

Indexed Terms

Cognitive Dysfunction; Dementia; Incidence; Leisure Activities; Dementia; cognitive reserve

Study Type

Meta-Analysis; Systematic Review; Quantitative Methods

Disciplines

Geriatrics

PubMed ID

31814445

Document Type

Article

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