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针对痴呆症患者的音乐治疗干预措施。

Music-based therapeutic interventions for people with dementia.

作者信息

van der Steen Jenny T, van Soest-Poortvliet Mirjam C, van der Wouden Johannes C, Bruinsma Manon S, Scholten Rob Jpm, Vink Annemiek C

机构信息

Department of Public Health and Primary Care, Leiden University Medical Center, Hippocratespad 21, Gebouw 3, PO Box 9600, Leiden, Netherlands, 2300RC.

Program on Aging, Netherlands Institute of Mental Health and Addiction, PO Box 725, Utrecht, Netherlands, 3500 AS.

出版信息

Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2017 May 2;5(5):CD003477. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD003477.pub3.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Dementia is a clinical syndrome with a number of different causes which is characterised by deterioration in cognitive, behavioural, social and emotional functions. Pharmacological interventions are available but have limited effect to treat many of the syndrome's features. Less research has been directed towards non-pharmacological treatments. In this review, we examined the evidence for effects of music-based interventions as a treatment.

OBJECTIVES

To assess the effects of music-based therapeutic interventions for people with dementia on emotional well-being including quality of life, mood disturbance or negative affect, behavioural problems, social behaviour, and cognition at the end of therapy and four or more weeks after the end of treatment.

SEARCH METHODS

We searched ALOIS, the Specialized Register of the Cochrane Dementia and Cognitive Improvement Group (CDCIG) on 14 April 2010 using the terms: music therapy, music, singing, sing, auditory stimulation. Additional searches were also carried out on 3 July 2015 in the major healthcare databases MEDLINE, Embase, psycINFO, CINAHL and LILACS; and in trial registers and grey literature sources. On 12 April 2016, we searched the major databases for new studies for future evaluation.

SELECTION CRITERIA

We included randomized controlled trials of music-based therapeutic interventions (at least five sessions) for people with dementia that measured any of our outcomes of interest. Control groups either received usual care or other activities.

DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS

Two reviewers worked independently to screen the retrieved studies against the inclusion criteria and then to extract data and assess methodological quality of the included studies. If necessary, we contacted trial authors to ask for additional data, including relevant subscales, or for other missing information. We pooled data using random-effects models.

MAIN RESULTS

We included 17 studies. Sixteen studies with a total of 620 participants contributed data to meta-analyses. Participants in the studies had dementia of varying degrees of severity, but all were resident in institutions. Five studies delivered an individual music intervention; in the others, the intervention was delivered to groups of participants. Most interventions involved both active and receptive musical elements. The methodological quality of the studies varied. All were at high risk of performance bias and some were at high risk of detection or other bias. At the end of treatment, we found low-quality evidence that music-based therapeutic interventions may have little or no effect on emotional well-being and quality of life (standardized mean difference, SMD 0.32, 95% CI -0.08 to 0.71; 6 studies, 181 participants), overall behaviour problems (SMD -0.20, 95% CI -0.56 to 0.17; 6 studies, 209 participants) and cognition (SMD 0.21, 95% CI -0.04 to 0.45; 6 studies, 257 participants). We found moderate-quality evidence that they reduce depressive symptoms (SMD -0.28, 95% CI -0.48 to -0.07; 9 studies, 376 participants), but do not decrease agitation or aggression (SMD -0.08, 95% CI -0.29 to 0.14; 12 studies, 515 participants). The quality of the evidence on anxiety and social behaviour was very low, so effects were very uncertain. The evidence for all long-term outcomes was also of very low quality.

AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Providing people with dementia with at least five sessions of a music-based therapeutic intervention probably reduces depressive symptoms but has little or no effect on agitation or aggression. There may also be little or no effect on emotional well-being or quality of life, overall behavioural problems and cognition. We are uncertain about effects on anxiety or social behaviour, and about any long-term effects. Future studies should employ larger sample sizes, and include all important outcomes, in particular 'positive' outcomes such as emotional well-being and social outcomes. Future studies should also examine the duration of effects in relation to the overall duration of treatment and the number of sessions.

摘要

背景

痴呆是一种具有多种不同病因的临床综合征,其特征是认知、行为、社交和情感功能衰退。虽然有药物干预措施,但对该综合征的许多特征治疗效果有限。针对非药物治疗的研究较少。在本综述中,我们考察了基于音乐的干预措施作为一种治疗方法的效果证据。

目的

评估针对痴呆患者的基于音乐的治疗性干预措施在治疗结束时以及治疗结束四周或更长时间后,对其情绪健康(包括生活质量、情绪障碍或消极情绪)、行为问题、社交行为和认知的影响。

检索方法

我们于2010年4月14日在Cochrane痴呆与认知改善小组(CDCIG)的专业注册库ALOIS中进行检索,检索词为:音乐疗法、音乐、唱歌、歌唱、听觉刺激。2015年7月3日,我们还在主要的医疗保健数据库MEDLINE、Embase、psycINFO、CINAHL和LILACS中进行了额外检索;并在试验注册库和灰色文献来源中进行了检索。2016年4月12日,我们在主要数据库中检索新的研究以便进行未来评估。

入选标准

我们纳入了针对痴呆患者的基于音乐的治疗性干预措施(至少五节)的随机对照试验,这些试验测量了我们感兴趣的任何结果。对照组接受常规护理或其他活动。

数据收集与分析

两名评价员独立工作,根据纳入标准筛选检索到的研究,然后提取数据并评估纳入研究的方法学质量。如有必要,我们联系试验作者索要额外数据,包括相关子量表或其他缺失信息。我们使用随机效应模型合并数据。

主要结果

我们纳入了17项研究。16项研究共620名参与者为荟萃分析提供了数据。这些研究中的参与者患有不同严重程度的痴呆,但均居住在机构中。5项研究提供了个体音乐干预;在其他研究中,干预是针对参与者群体进行的。大多数干预措施都涉及主动和接受性音乐元素。研究的方法学质量各不相同。所有研究都存在较高的实施偏倚风险,一些研究存在较高的检测或其他偏倚风险。在治疗结束时,我们发现低质量证据表明基于音乐的治疗性干预措施可能对情绪健康和生活质量几乎没有或没有影响(标准化均数差,SMD 0.32,95%CI -0.08至0.71;6项研究,181名参与者)、总体行为问题(SMD -0.20,95%CI -0.56至0.17;6项研究,209名参与者)和认知(SMD 0.21,95%CI -0.04至0.45;6项研究,257名参与者)。我们发现中等质量证据表明它们可减轻抑郁症状(SMD -0.28,95%CI -0.48至-0.07;9项研究,376名参与者),但不会减少激越或攻击行为(SMD -0.08,95%CI -0.29至0.14;12项研究,515名参与者)。关于焦虑和社交行为的证据质量非常低,因此效果非常不确定。所有长期结果的证据质量也非常低。

作者结论

为痴呆患者提供至少五节基于音乐的治疗性干预措施可能会减轻抑郁症状,但对激越或攻击行为几乎没有或没有影响。对情绪健康或生活质量、总体行为问题和认知可能也几乎没有或没有影响。我们不确定对焦虑或社交行为的影响,以及任何长期影响。未来的研究应采用更大的样本量,并纳入所有重要结果,特别是“积极”结果,如情绪健康和社交结果。未来的研究还应考察效果持续时间与治疗总时长和疗程数的关系。

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