NEW YORK, Feb. 20, 2008

Music To The Ears Of Some Stroke Victims

Tunes May Help Their Recovery, Research Shows

  • Dr. Holly Phillips on <i><b>The Early Show</i></b> Wednesday

    Dr. Holly Phillips on The Early Show Wednesday  (CBS/EARLY SHOW)

  • Interactive In Your Head

    A look at the human brain and diseases and disorders that can plague it.

(CBS)  Each year, an estimated three-quarters of a million Americans suffer strokes.

Now, a small study done in Finland suggests music therapy may help some stroke patients recover.

Researchers looked at 60 people who had suffered similar kinds of strokes, explains Early Show medical contributor Dr. Holly Phillips of CBS station WCBS-TV in New York.

They'd suffered a middle cerebral artery stroke. That's the largest artery in the brain and the most common site of strokes. A blockage of that artery cuts off oxygen to one side of the brain, killing those brain cells.

People who survive this kind of stroke are often paralyzed, or have problems with speech and cognition.

The goal of stroke therapy is to get as much of that function back as possible, Phillips continued, and it works best if you start immediately.

So, what might music have to do with that?

Several things, Phillips says. The first is emotional. Researchers thought music might have a calming, reassuring and relaxing effect on patients. After all -- a stroke is devastating.

Also, they wanted to see if they could actually help the brain's cognitive powers start functioning again.

Some of the patients were told to pick out something they liked and play it for an hour or two per day. They could choose music, or they could choose an audio book, with spoken words only. Other patients were given nothing to listen to at all.

Both groups also received standard forms of stroke therapy, such as physical rehabilitation.

The music group showed a 60 percent improvement in verbal memory over three months, much better than the people who didn't listen to music or chose audio books. They were also less depressed, and had a better attention span.

What do the researchers think the music did?

We've known for a while, Phillips says, that music stimulates feel-good chemicals inside the brain such as serotonin, which in turn may help improve overall brain function. The researchers also think the music may have stimulated areas of the brain that were damaged,forcing them to work again. That may in essence rewire the brain, so parts that were never used before might start making up for the function that was lost.

It wasn't the music alone, Phillips points out but, together with other therapies, it appears that music showed some real value.

© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Add a Comment
by flutegeek06 February 21, 2008 10:34 PM EST
I''m studying to become a Music Therapist and music does work wonders. Music from the simplest form of playing a rhythm on a drum can help someone who had a stroke! As unbelievable as music, being a therapeutic medium may seem, it has always been seen as a form of therapy since Ancient Greece. I would recommend that the next time someone discusses how music effects one''s being, they talk to a certified Music Therapist. www.musictherapy.org
Reply to this comment
by flutegeek06 February 21, 2008 10:10 PM EST
I''m studying to become a Music Therapist and music does work wonders. Music from the simplest form of playing a rhythm on a drum can help someone who had a stroke! As unbelievable as music, being a therapeutic medium may seem, it has always been seen as a form of therapy since Ancient Greece. I would recommend that the next time someone discusses how music effects one''s being, they talk to a certified Music Therapist. www.musictherapy.org
Reply to this comment
by Judy Lee February 21, 2008 6:47 PM EST
I sing in a group that goes to nursing homes and assisted living facilities 2 days every single week in the Pinellas County Florida area and the remarkable change we make in these peoples lives with our upbeat music from the past is noticible every single day we perform. I would be so bold as to say that healing occurs every day we sing. Judy Lee of The Love Notes
Reply to this comment

Exclusive Webshow

Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie." Watch Now

Latest News
News in Pictures
Scroll Left Scroll Right
Connect with CBS News

Stay connected with the CBS News using your favorite social networks and online news applications: