Clinical Trials Directory

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UnknownNCT04441515

Music After Stroke To Enhance Rehabilitation

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
12 (estimated)
Sponsor
Pace University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Music that is familiar and preferred by patients has been shown to heighten neuroplasticity and can mitigate these disabilities. Therefore, this study seeks to explore the effect of providing patient preferred music to patients in the very early post stroke period (within 24 hours of a left cerebral artery stroke \[LMCA\]event) as a complementary modality to usual stroke care.

Detailed description

Aim I. The primary aim of MASTER is to identify whether a potential relationship exists between an intervention of participant preferred music, when initiated within the first 24 hours following a left middle cerebral artery stroke, and a reduction in the following disabilities: Expressive aphasia, right hand functional deficit and post stroke depression. This aim will serve to address the first research hypothesis and address the relationship between These disabilities are well known sequalae among patients diagnosed with the most common form of stroke, a LMCA stroke. Participant preferred music within the first 24 hours following a LMCA stroke and a reduction in: Expressive aphasia, right hand functional deficit and post stroke depression, as these disabilities are well known sequalae among LMCA stroke patients. Aim II. The second aim of MASTER is to identify if a relationship exists between an intervention of audible books, when initiated within the first 24 hours following a LMCA stroke, and a reduction in the following disabilities: Expressive aphasia, right hand functional deficit and post stroke depression. Sufficient evidence exists to suggest that although listening to books stimulates cognitive function, the effect of melody and participant engagement in music is far superior to listening to words alone as the inherent rhythmicity of patient-favored music has been shown to strengthen synchronous neuronal connectivity, by modulating dopamine and inducing fine grained neuroanatomical changes in a recovering brain.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEIpod with musicmusic of patient's preference provided 2 hours daily
DEVICEipod with books to listen2 hours of daily listening to books
DEVICEipod only with usual careparticipants given device only

Timeline

Start date
2021-04-30
Primary completion
2023-10-30
Completion
2023-12-30
First posted
2020-06-22
Last updated
2021-03-11

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04441515. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.