Therapeutic Potential of Music-Based Interventions on the Stress Response and Neuroinflammatory Biomarkers in COVID-19: A Review

Jared Saifman, Aaron Colverson, Amanda Prem, Joseph Chomiak, Sylvain Doré
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

COVID-19 continues to strain healthcare systems around the globe. Research has shown a relationship between COVID-19 and an inflammatory response, including neuropathological outcomes. Additionally, studies have shown positive effects of engagement with music on inflammatory responses; music may have potential, as a method, to reduce inflammation triggered by COVID-19. This review compiles exhaustive research from multiple disciplines to account for this possibility. The authors utilized a meta-narrative approach to complete this review. The search was conducted using PubMed, Embase, OneSearch, Primo, Google Scholar, Clinicaltrials.gov, and the bibliographies of relevant articles. In total, 84 articles were included for full-text review, discussion, and analysis. Articles pertaining to music and acoustics encompassed a date range from 1964–2020. Articles referencing COVID-19 spanned the years 2019–2021. This work focused on associations between engagement with music, stress response, blood-brain barrier integrity, inflammation, COVID-19, and neuropathology in preclinical and clinical models. Detailed analysis revealed that engagement with music has the potential to reduce the harmful effects of COVID-19, particularly in the inflammation and blood clotting pathways associated with a range of pathophysiological and neuropathological issues. Further work is warranted to standardize and validate existing methods associating positive effects of engagement with music on the negative effects of COVID-19.
基于音乐的干预对COVID-19应激反应和神经炎症生物标志物的治疗潜力:综述
COVID-19继续给全球卫生保健系统带来压力。研究表明,COVID-19与炎症反应之间存在关系,包括神经病理结果。此外,研究表明,与音乐接触对炎症反应有积极影响;作为一种方法,音乐可能有潜力减少COVID-19引发的炎症。这篇综述汇编了来自多个学科的详尽研究来解释这种可能性。作者使用元叙事方法来完成这一综述。检索使用PubMed、Embase、OneSearch、Primo、b谷歌Scholar、Clinicaltrials.gov以及相关文章的参考书目进行。总共有84篇文章被纳入全文审查、讨论和分析。有关音乐和声学的文章涵盖了1964年至2020年的时间范围。涉及COVID-19的文章跨越2019-2021年。这项工作的重点是在临床前和临床模型中研究音乐参与、压力反应、血脑屏障完整性、炎症、COVID-19和神经病理学之间的联系。详细分析表明,接触音乐有可能减少COVID-19的有害影响,特别是在与一系列病理生理和神经病理问题相关的炎症和凝血途径方面。需要进一步的工作来标准化和验证将参与音乐的积极影响与COVID-19的负面影响联系起来的现有方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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