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This study aims to provide mechanistic insights into how group drumming as a music-based intervention (MBI) affects pain responses and nociceptive function in individuals with Alzheimer's Disease (AD), mild dementia or mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Heart rate (HR), heart rate variability (HRV), and brain activity will be measured during communal drumming with their dyadic partners and others. Brain activity, blood pressure, cognitive abilities, blood hormone levels, and static and dynamic pain will also be measured during sessions pre and post the 8-week community drum circle. Investigators will leverage various measurement techniques including, but not limited to, electroencephalography (EEG), quantitative sensory testing (QST), behavioral, surveys, and physiological monitoring to study the impact of group drumming on pain and brain activity in AD and inter-dyad synchrony.
Full description
Analysis of recordings captured during drum circles will be conducted using music information retrieval, pulse clarity, psychological ethnography, and similar methods. Investigators hypothesize that (1) the communal drum circles will lead to a decrease in dynamic pain (e.g. sensitivity to repeated stimuli), (2) the ability of the brain to change and adapt will be enhanced in the drumming group compared to the control group, (3) change in and synchrony of heart rate between participants might underlie the impact of communal drumming on pain, and (4) group drumming will increase circulating oxytocin and serotonin and that the modulation of these neurohormones contribute to decreased pain phenomenon.
The primary objective of this study is to investigate how group drumming affects pain responses and nociceptive function in individuals with mild dementia or mild cognitive impairment.
The secondary objectives of this study are to:
In-person sessions of the study will be conducted by Yale IRB-approved study team members at the Connecticut Mental Health Center (CMHC; 34 Park St, New Haven, CT 06519).
Each participant pair, consisting of one person with dementia and chronic pain (or without chronic pain in the control group) and their caregiver/study partner will take part in ten weekly sessions.
During Week 1, participants will arrive to the CMHC to undergo deep phenotyping of pain using QST, blood sampling, brain activity recordings will be performed for baseline and plasticity analysis, and participants will fill out psychometric assessments (~3 hours). Participants will also be asked to complete communication/language assessments.
During Weeks 2 through 9, participants in the experimental group will be asked to arrive to the CMHC to participate in 45-minute to 1-hour drumming sessions. Participants in the control group will participate in a listening activity. All participants with be asked to complete psychometric assessments before and after the drumming sessions.
During Week 10, participants will return to the CMHC for deep phenotyping of pain, bloodwork, EEG data collection, and psychometric surveys, and communication/language assessments.
Collection of these data allow investigators to assess the impact of communal drumming on brain activity, heart rate, pain perception, psychological symptoms, blood hormone levels, and communication/language.
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60 participants in 2 patient groups
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AZA Allsop, MD, PhD; AZA Lab
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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