Cepeda M S, Carr D B, Lau J, Alvarez H
Javeriana University School of Medicine, Department of Anesthesia, Cra 4- 70 -69, Bogota, Colombia.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2006 Apr 19(2):CD004843. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD004843.pub2.
The efficacy of music for the treatment of pain has not been established.
To evaluate the effect of music on acute, chronic or cancer pain intensity, pain relief, and analgesic requirements.
We searched The Cochrane Library, MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsycINFO, LILACS and the references in retrieved manuscripts. There was no language restriction.
We included randomized controlled trials that evaluated the effect of music on any type of pain in children or adults. We excluded trials that reported results of concurrent non-pharmacological therapies.
Data was extracted by two independent review authors. We calculated the mean difference in pain intensity levels, percentage of patients with at least 50% pain relief, and opioid requirements. We converted opioid consumption to morphine equivalents. To explore heterogeneity, studies that evaluated adults, children, acute, chronic, malignant, labor, procedural, or experimental pain were evaluated separately, as well as those studies in which patients chose the type of music.
Fifty-one studies involving 1867 subjects exposed to music and 1796 controls met inclusion criteria. In the 31 studies evaluating mean pain intensity there was a considerable variation in the effect of music, indicating statistical heterogeneity ( I(2) = 85.3%). After grouping the studies according to the pain model, this heterogeneity remained, with the exception of the studies that evaluated acute postoperative pain. In this last group, patients exposed to music had pain intensity that was 0.5 units lower on a zero to ten scale than unexposed subjects (95% CI: -0.9 to -0.2). Studies that permitted patients to select the music did not reveal a benefit from music; the decline in pain intensity was 0.2 units, 95% CI (-0.7 to 0.2). Four studies reported the proportion of subjects with at least 50% pain relief; subjects exposed to music had a 70% higher likelihood of having pain relief than unexposed subjects (95% CI: 1.21 to 2.37). NNT = 5 (95% CI: 4 to 13). Three studies evaluated opioid requirements two hours after surgery: subjects exposed to music required 1.0 mg (18.4%) less morphine (95% CI: -2.0 to -0.2) than unexposed subjects. Five studies assessed requirements 24 hours after surgery: the music group required 5.7 mg (15.4%) less morphine than the unexposed group (95% CI: -8.8 to -2.6). Five studies evaluated requirements during painful procedures: the difference in requirements showed a trend towards favoring the music group (-0.7 mg, 95% CI: -1.8 to 0.4).
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Listening to music reduces pain intensity levels and opioid requirements, but the magnitude of these benefits is small and, therefore, its clinical importance unclear.
音乐治疗疼痛的疗效尚未得到证实。
评估音乐对急性、慢性或癌痛强度、疼痛缓解及镇痛需求的影响。
我们检索了考克兰图书馆、医学索引在线、荷兰医学文摘数据库、心理学文摘数据库、拉丁美洲及加勒比地区卫生科学数据库以及检索到的手稿中的参考文献。无语言限制。
我们纳入了评估音乐对儿童或成人任何类型疼痛影响的随机对照试验。我们排除了报告同期非药物疗法结果的试验。
由两位独立的综述作者提取数据。我们计算了疼痛强度水平的平均差异、至少有50%疼痛缓解的患者百分比以及阿片类药物需求。我们将阿片类药物消耗量换算为吗啡当量。为探究异质性,分别评估了评估成人、儿童、急性、慢性、恶性、分娩、手术过程或实验性疼痛的研究,以及患者选择音乐类型的研究。
51项研究涉及1867名接受音乐治疗的受试者和1796名对照,符合纳入标准。在31项评估平均疼痛强度的研究中,音乐的效果存在相当大的差异,表明存在统计学异质性(I² = 85.3%)。根据疼痛模型对研究进行分组后,除评估急性术后疼痛的研究外,这种异质性依然存在。在最后一组中,接受音乐治疗的患者在0至10分的疼痛强度量表上比未接受治疗的受试者低0.5分(95%可信区间:-0.9至-0.2)。允许患者选择音乐的研究未显示音乐有任何益处;疼痛强度下降了0.2分,95%可信区间(-0.7至0.2)。四项研究报告了至少有50%疼痛缓解的受试者比例;接受音乐治疗的受试者疼痛缓解的可能性比未接受治疗的受试者高70%(95%可信区间:1.21至2.37)。所需治疗人数 = 5(95%可信区间:4至13)。三项研究评估了术后两小时的阿片类药物需求:接受音乐治疗的受试者比未接受治疗的受试者所需吗啡少1.0毫克(18.4%)(95%可信区间:-2.0至-0.2)。五项研究评估了术后24小时的需求:音乐组比未接受治疗组所需吗啡少5.7毫克(15.4%)(95%可信区间:-8.8至-2.6)。五项研究评估了疼痛手术过程中的需求:需求差异显示出有利于音乐组的趋势(-0.7毫克,95%可信区间:-1.8至0.4)。
听音乐可降低疼痛强度水平和阿片类药物需求,但这些益处的程度较小,因此其临床重要性尚不清楚。