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The effects of music listening interventions on cognition and mood post-stroke: a systematic review

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Version 2 2016-08-29, 14:19
Version 1 2016-08-22, 14:08
journal contribution
posted on 2016-08-29, 14:19 authored by Satu Baylan, Rhiannon Swann-Price, Guy Peryer, Terry Quinn

Introduction: Music listening may have beneficial psychological effects but there has been no comprehensive synthesis of the available data describing efficacy of music listening in stroke.

Areas covered: We performed a systematic review examining the effects of music listening interventions on cognition and mood post-stroke. We found five published trials (n = 169 participants) and four ongoing trials. All studies demonstrated benefits of music listening on at least one measure of cognition or mood. Heterogeneity precluded meta-analysis and all included studies had potential risk of bias. Common reporting or methodological issues including lack of blinding, lack of detail on the intervention and safety reporting.

Expert commentary: It is too early to recommend music listening as routine treatment post-stroke, available studies have been under-powered and at risk of bias. Accepting these caveats, music listening may have beneficial effects on both mood and cognition and we await the results of ongoing controlled studies.

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    Expert Review of Neurotherapeutics

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