Masters of Health Magazine October 2024 | Page 79

Music Benefits Cognitive Health

by Steve Rees, Ret. RN, Harpist

A significant percentage of my nursing career in hemodialysis involved caring for people with advanced age—not everyone, but a significant percentage of them. As I played the harp during many of their treatments and noted positive physiological changes, I began to wonder about what mechanisms were at work to produce these positive results.

Recently, I came across an article about how music affects the cognitive health of older adults. I studied the article to see if the research supported some of my suspicions.

The article was first published in Network Neuroscience, Volume 7, Issue 4, 2023: Lead author – Sarah E. M. Faber – conducting research out of Simon Fraser University

https://direct.mit.edu/netn/article/7/4/1404/117283/Age-related-variability-in-network-engagement

"Listening to music benefits older adults' cognitive health, even if it's music they haven't heard before or don't enjoy very much. The study discovered that listening to music activates brain regions linked to reward in older adults, regardless of their familiarity with the music."

"Hearing music engages multiple networks across our brains," says Faber. "On top of the physical properties of sounds we hear; several additional factors help form the whole-brain picture. Have you heard the song before? Do you like it? Does it bring back memories?"

The study was conducted with the methodology consisting of the researchers monitoring brain activity across two groups of participants listening to music: "a younger group of adults with an average age of 19 and a second group of older adults with an average age of 67. Participants listened to 24 samples of music, including songs they selected themselves and popular and recognizable music intentionally chosen by researchers. Also included were ambiguous songs composed specifically for the study."

"We found that the brain structures responsible for processing physiological and cognitive reward—also known as the reward network—are activated in younger adults while they listen to music they like or are familiar with. However, older adults' reward networks are stimulated by music even when it is brand new to them, or if they report not liking it very much," says Faber.

She went on to say, "Understanding how music works in the brain is highly complex, especially given that our brains are constantly evolving with age,"

"With training, the auditory reward network can become even more engaged across all types of music. But even when the music is not familiar to them, it still has the ability to make their body move, and to help calibrate or balance their emotions by activating those regions in the brain."

One of her comments centered around the benefits of using music in Alzheimer patients. I have had several real-life experiences with these benefits. One time, I was asked to come into a locked unit for Alzheimer or memory care people. As I stepped through the door, there was chaos all around, screaming and restlessness on every side. I just sat down and started playing my harp with a slow beat music and within 15 minutes, everything had quieted down dramatically.

I played for about an hour and then told them I had another appointment I had to get on to. They were insistent that I couldn't leave as everything was so much better. I gave them several CDs so they could play them whenever they needed it and went on to my next appointment. A couple of weeks later, I received a note from the director. She wrote, "I want to thank you for the music you left with us. Ever since then we have been playing it almost non-stop and the transformation of this unit has been none other than a miracle. Thank you."