3. Free PowerPoint Templates
Music processing
Maurice Ravel (1875-1937)
- suffered left-hemisphere stroke and developed
aphasia
- he could still recognize melodies, pick up tiny mistakes
in music that he heard being played, judge the tuning
of pianos (music perception)
- he could no longer recognize written music, play the
piano or compose (music production)
- right-hemisphere predominance for music processing
5. Free PowerPoint Templates
References:
Särkämö T, Tervaniemi M, Laitinen S. Music listening enhances cognitive recovery and mood after middle cerebral artery stroke.
Brain. 2008 Mar;131(Pt 3):866-76. doi: 10.1093/brain/awn013
Music therapy in acute poststroke recovery
Music group
- 1 hour/ day music for
2 months
- standard medical care
and rehabilitation
Language group
- 1 hour/day audio
books for 2 months
- standard medical care
and rehabilitation
Control group
- no listening materials
- standard medical care
and rehabilitation
6. Free PowerPoint Templates
References:
Särkämö T, Tervaniemi M, Laitinen S. Music listening enhances cognitive recovery and mood after middle cerebral artery stroke.
Brain. 2008 Mar;131(Pt 3):866-76. doi: 10.1093/brain/awn013
Music therapy in acute poststroke recovery
- bilateral network of frontal,
temporal, parietal and
subcortical areas related to
attention, semantic and
music-syntactic processing,
memory and motor
functions
- limbic and paralimbic
regions related to
emotional processing
- improvement in focused
attention
- improvement in verbal
memory
- less depressed and
confused mood
7. Free PowerPoint Templates
References:
Lin LC, Lee MW, Wei RC. Mozart K.448 listening decreased seizure recurrence and epileptiform discharges in children with first unprovoked seizures: a randomized
controlled study.
BMC Complement Altern Med.2014 Jan 13;14:17. doi: 10.1186/1472-6882-14-17.
Mozart effect in clinical practice
- children in the
treatment group listened
to Mozart’s Sonata for
Two Pianos in D major
(K.448) daily before
bedtime for at least six
months
- produces a temporal
increase in spatial
reasoning scores, the so-
called “Mozart effect”
- increases weight gain
in preterm infants
- reduces the seizure
recurrence rate and
epileptiform
discharges with first
unprovoked seizures,
especially of
idiopathic etiology
8. Free PowerPoint Templates
Parkinson’s disease: Argentine tango or Walz and Foxtrot?
References:
Hackney ME, Earhart GM. Effects of Dance on Movement Control in Parkinson’s Disease: A Comparison of Argentine Tango and American Ballroom.
J Rehabil Med. 2009 May; 41(6):475-481. doi: 10.2340/16501977-0362
- progressive neurodegenerative movement disorder
- affecting more than 10 000 people in Croatia
- postural instability, gait difficulties and impaired functional mobility that may lead to falls
and a decreased quality of life
- 60% of people older than 65 do not achieve the recommended daily amount of physical
activity
- activity levels in individulas with PD are 15% lower than those of age-matched control
- effective over the long term as it is an enjoyable exercise
- interesting and engaging
- dynamic balance and continual adjustment to environmental demands
9. Free PowerPoint Templates
Parkinson’s disease: Argentine tango or Walz and Foxtrot?
References:
Hackney ME, Earhart GM. Effects of Dance on Movement Control in Parkinson’s Disease: A Comparison of Argentine Tango and American Ballroom.
J Rehabil Med. 2009 May; 41(6):475-481. doi: 10.2340/16501977-0362
20-hour partnered dance
program in 13 weeks
flexible, improvisational step
patterns composed of small
step elements, spontaneous
multi-directional perturbation
(for the follower) and rhythmic
variation
20-hour partnered dance
program in 13 weeks
strict syllabus of step patterns
involving more complex step
elements, more predictable
directions of perturbation and
little rhythmic variation or
improvisation
untreated age-, sex- and stage
of disease-matched cohort
Argentine tango group Control groupWalz and Foxtrot group
10. Free PowerPoint Templates
Parkinson’s disease: Argentine tango or Walz and Foxtrot?
References:
Hackney ME, Earhart GM. Effects of Dance on Movement Control in Parkinson’s Disease: A Comparison of Argentine Tango and American Ballroom.
J Rehabil Med. 2009 May; 41(6):475-481. doi: 10.2340/16501977-0362
improvement on Berg Balance
Scale (BBS)
Improvement on six minute
walk test (6MWT) along a 30.5m
path
improvement in freezing on
gait
improvement on Berg Balance
Scale (BBS)
Improvement on six minute
walk test (6MWT) along a 30.5m
path
no change in freezing on gait impairment in freezing on gait
Argentine tango group Walz and Foxtrot group Control group
11. Free PowerPoint Templates
Parkinson’s disease: Argentine tango or Walz and Foxtrot?
References:
Hackney ME, Earhart GM. Effects of Dance on Movement Control in Parkinson’s Disease: A Comparison of Argentine Tango and American Ballroom.
J Rehabil Med. 2009 May; 41(6):475-481. doi: 10.2340/16501977-0362
access the supplementary
motor area via the thalamus or
the premotor cortex via
cerebellum thereby bypassing
the dysfunctional basal ganglia
improve gait speed and
movement initiation while
preforming a functional task
enhance balance, even a light
touch contact is known to
facilitate postural stability
partner's weight shifting and
indicated direction of
movement can help initiate
movement and increase or
maintain stride lenght
visual cues, such as foot to step
over, can relieve freezing of gait
rhythmic alternating shift of
center of mass from foot to foot
incorporate slow and quick
steps of varying lengths which
requires continual adjustment
backward walking
MUSIC PARTNER
SPECIFIC PATTERN OF
MOVEMENT