Music activates regions of the brain spared by Alzheimer's disease

Authored by eurekalert.org and submitted by SirT6

Ever get chills listening to a particularly moving piece of music? You can thank the salience network of the brain for that emotional joint. Surprisingly, this region also remains an island of remembrance that is spared from the ravages of Alzheimer's disease. Researchers at the University of Utah Health are looking to this region of the brain to develop music-based treatments to help alleviate anxiety in patients with dementia. Their research will appear in the April online issue of The Journal of Prevention of Alzheimer's Disease.

"People with dementia are confronted by a world that is unfamiliar to them, which causes disorientation and anxiety" said Jeff Anderson, M.D., Ph.D., associate professor in Radiology at U of U Health and contributing author on the study. "We believe music will tap into the salience network of the brain that is still relatively functioning."

Previous work demonstrated the effect of a personalized music program on mood for dementia patients. This study set out to examine a mechanism that activates the attentional network in the salience region of the brain. The results offer a new way to approach anxiety, depression and agitation in patients with dementia. Activation of neighboring regions of the brain may also offer opportunities to delay the continued decline caused by the disease.

For three weeks, the researchers helped participants select meaningful songs and trained the patient and caregiver on how to use a portable media player loaded with the self-selected collection of music.

"When you put headphones on dementia patients and play familiar music, they come alive," said Jace King, a graduate student in the Brain Network Lab and first author on the paper. "Music is like an anchor, grounding the patient back in reality."

Using a functional MRI, the researchers scanned the patients to image the regions of the brain that lit up when they listened to 20-second clips of music versus silence. The researchers played eight clips of music from the patient's music collection, eight clips of the same music played in reverse and eight blocks of silence. The researchers compared the images from each scan.

The researchers found that music activates the brain, causing whole regions to communicate. By listening to the personal soundtrack, the visual network, the salience network, the executive network and the cerebellar and corticocerebellar network pairs all showed significantly higher functional connectivity.

"This is objective evidence from brain imaging that shows personally meaningful music is an alternative route for communicating with patients who have Alzheimer's disease," said Norman Foster, M.D., Director of the Center for Alzheimer's Care at U of U Health and senior author on the paper. "Language and visual memory pathways are damaged early as the disease progresses, but personalized music programs can activate the brain, especially for patients who are losing contact with their environment."

However, these results are by no means conclusive. The researchers note the small sample size (17 participants) for this study. In addition, the study only included a single imaging session for each patient. It is remains unclear whether the effects identified in this study persist beyond a brief period of stimulation or whether other areas of memory or mood are enhanced by changes in neural activation and connectivity for the long term.

"In our society, the diagnoses of dementia are snowballing and are taxing resources to the max," Anderson said. "No one says playing music will be a cure for Alzheimer's disease, but it might make the symptoms more manageable, decrease the cost of care and improve a patient's quality of life."

K.G. Jones, M. Rollins, K. Macnamee, C. Moffit, S.R. Naidu, E. Garcia-Leavitt, R.K. Gurgel, J. Amaro and K.R. Breitenbach at U of U Health and University of Utah, E. Goldberg from the Jewish Family Services of Utah, J.M. Watson from University of Colorado and M.A. Ferguson from Massachusetts General Hospital also contributed to this project. This work received support from A. Scott Anderson and the American Otological Society.

University of Utah Health is the state's only academic health care system, providing leading-edge and compassionate medicine for a referral area that encompasses 10% of the U.S., including Idaho, Wyoming, Montana and much of Nevada. A hub for health sciences research and education in the region, U of U Health touts a $291 million research enterprise and trains the majority of Utah's physicians and more than 1,250 health care providers at its Schools of Medicine and Dentistry and Colleges of Nursing, Pharmacy and Health. With more than 20,000 employees, the system includes 12 community clinics and four hospitals -- University Hospital; University Neuropsychiatric Institute; Huntsman Cancer Hospital; and the University Orthopaedic Center. For eight straight years, U of U Health has ranked among the top 10 U.S. academic medical centers in the rigorous Vizient Quality and Accountability Study, including reaching No. 1 in 2010 and 2016.

kapac on April 29th, 2018 at 18:49 UTC »

Unless the dementia they have is have behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia, sadly. Alzheimers Disease spreads in nodes of the Default Mode Network, which works antagonistically with the Salience Network- they have inhibitory effects on one another, and decreased activity in one network is associated with increased activity in the other. So as AD causes degeneration in the DMN, you can see relative sparing and even increased activation of the Salience Network. This is why patients with AD retain their personality and interpersonal warmth for so long in comparison to other cognitive functions such as memory and attention.

BvFTD is in many ways the "opposite" of AD. It causes atrophy in the nodes of the Salience Network, which is associated with social and emotional processing, while sparing the DMN, which supports the formation of new memories and any cognitive task that involves picturing the self in the past/future, among other things. So people diagnosed with this dementia have no initial memory symptoms, but exhibit striking behavioral changes, a loss of empathy, and broad social-emotional processing deficits. Because of this, they are often misdiagnosed with psychiatric disorders before the progression of symptoms and imaging apparent atrophy allows for an accurate diagnosis.

It's a horrific disease like all dementias, but relatively lesser known with comparison to AD, despite being the second most common form of early-onset dementia. Here is the famous paper providing imaging evidence for the network degeneration hypothesis, and here is a website with more information about frontotemporal dementia.

ElectrixReddit on April 29th, 2018 at 15:38 UTC »

Does this mean that Coco is scientifically accurate?

Arm-the-homeless on April 29th, 2018 at 14:38 UTC »

Moving video of an older gentleman with dementia reacting to his favorite music.

The power of music is fascinating! I especially love how he's able to recall his favorite song (and do a great job of singing it).

And as an aside, here's a crude attempt at humor I made out of the same video. Seeing the original video first kind of kills the joke, but figured I'd share it anyway since it's the reason I have the original video bookmarked. I just thought the juxtaposition of the song with his reaction was humorous. Hopefully it's appreciated, though if it isn't, I understand.