Autonomic Nervous System Imbalance Clinical Trial
Official title:
Physiological Correlates of Active Music-making and Passive Listening in Music Based Interventions
Purpose: In this preparatory study, the investigators will demonstrate the feasibility of
using a structured MT intervention as a treatment for MDD by measuring stress hormone levels
and HRV before and after interventions.
Participants: Participants will be healthy controls ages 18 to 34 years old, both male and
female, english speakers, with no history or cardiovascular or neurological diseases.
Procedures: A passive listening control will be used in conjunction with an active music
therapy intervention to assess whether the physiological correlates can be targeted by active
music-making. Participants will experience both the control and the intervention in separate
sessions for a within participants design. HRV and saliva samples will be recorded pre and
post intervention for both sessions. The investigators anticipate that the active MT
intervention will produce greater physiological changes (pre intervention to post
intervention) than the passive listening control. Model-based estimation of treatment effects
and components of variance will inform our choice of the sample size deemed necessary for a
subsequent grant-funded MT-MDD clinical trial.
Music therapy (MT) interventions are a cost-effective, accessible, and holistic treatment
option with social, rhythmic, creative, sensorimotor, and respiratory components, giving them
the potential to improve the quality of life for a diverse array of disorders. Despite this,
the literature surrounding MT is controversial due to the lack of standardization in clinical
and research practice. Interventions range from passive listening of participant selected
music to clinician lead improvisational sessions. This inhibits a mechanistic understanding
of how MT functions, and what components produce therapeutic effects. Controlled studies that
target physiological outcomes are vital for the development of evidence-based MT treatments.
Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a leading cause of disability for U.S. and affects more
than 16 million Americans each year. Existing interventions struggle to combat this societal
burden and fail to reach the large number of treatment resistant patients, creating an urgent
need for the development of new treatment paradigms. Hyperactivity of the
hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and dysregulation of the autonomic nervous system
(ANS) have been implicated in MDD. Listening to music has been shown to alter stress hormone
levels and heart rate variability (HRV), physiological correlates of the HPA axis and ANS
respectively. Active music-making's effects on these correlates has yet to be studied. Since
active musical engagement involves multiple sensory inputs—proprioceptive and motor in
addition to auditory—it has the potential to heighten physiological changes associated with
listening to music alone. By contrasting a structured participation MT intervention with a
listening control, the investigators will target the effects of active participation in
music-making as a potential treatment for MDD.
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