Harding Eleanor E, van der Wal-Huisman Hanneke, van Leeuwen Barbara L
Department of Surgery, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands.
Department of Otorhinolaryngology, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands.
JMIR Res Protoc. 2023 Mar 10;12:e40034. doi: 10.2196/40034.
Postoperative patients who were previously engaged in the live musical intervention Meaningful Music in Healthcare reported significantly reduced perception of pain than patients without the intervention. This encouraging finding indicates a potential for postsurgical musical interventions to have a place in standard care as therapeutic pain relief. However, live music is logistically complex in hospital settings, and previous studies have reported the more cost-effective recorded music to serve as a similar pain-reducing function in postsurgical patients. Moreover, little is known about the potential underlying physiological mechanisms that may be responsible for the reduced pain perceived by patients after the live music intervention.
The primary objective is to see whether a live music intervention can significantly lower perceived postoperative pain compared to a recorded music intervention and do-nothing control. The secondary objective is to explore the neuroinflammatory underpinnings of postoperative pain and the potential role of a music intervention in mitigating neuroinflammation.
This intervention study will compare subjective postsurgical pain ratings among 3 groups: live music intervention, recorded music intervention, and standard care control. The design will take the form of an on-off nonrandomized controlled trial. Adult patients undergoing elective surgery will be invited to participate. The intervention is a daily music session of up to 30 minutes for a maximum of 5 days. The live music intervention group is visited by professional musicians once a day for 15 minutes and will be asked to interact. The recorded music active control intervention group receives 15 minutes of preselected music over headphones. The do-nothing group receives typical postsurgical care that does not include music.
At study completion, we will have an empirical indication of whether live music or recorded music has a significant impact on postoperative perceived pain. We hypothesize that the live music intervention will have more impact than recorded music but that both will reduce the perceived pain more than care-as-usual. We will moreover have the preliminary evidence of the physiological underpinnings responsible for reducing the perceived pain during a music intervention, from which hypotheses for future research may be derived.
Live music can provide relief from pain experienced by patients recovering from surgery; however, it is not known to what degree live music improves the patients' pain experience than the logistically simpler alternative of recorded music. Upon completion, this study will be able to statistically compare live versus recorded music. This study will moreover be able to provide insight into the neurophysiological mechanisms involved in reduced pain perception as a result of postoperative music listening.
The Netherlands Central Commission on Human Research NL76900.042.21; https://www.toetsingonline.nl/to/ccmo_search.nsf/fABRpop?readform&unids=F2CA4A88E6040A45C1258791001AEA44.
INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): PRR1-10.2196/40034.
先前参与医疗保健中的现场音乐干预“有意义的音乐”的术后患者,与未接受该干预的患者相比,其疼痛感知显著降低。这一令人鼓舞的发现表明,术后音乐干预有可能在标准护理中作为一种治疗性疼痛缓解手段。然而,现场音乐在医院环境中的安排较为复杂,先前的研究报告称,在术后患者中,更具成本效益的录制音乐也能起到类似的减轻疼痛的作用。此外,对于现场音乐干预后患者疼痛感知降低可能潜在的生理机制知之甚少。
主要目的是观察与录制音乐干预和无干预对照组相比,现场音乐干预是否能显著降低术后疼痛感知。次要目的是探讨术后疼痛的神经炎症基础以及音乐干预在减轻神经炎症方面的潜在作用。
这项干预研究将比较三组患者术后的主观疼痛评分:现场音乐干预组、录制音乐干预组和标准护理对照组。该设计将采用非随机对照的开-关试验形式。将邀请接受择期手术的成年患者参与。干预措施为每天进行一次时长最多30分钟、最多持续5天的音乐活动。现场音乐干预组每天有专业音乐家探访15分钟,并要求患者进行互动。录制音乐主动对照组通过耳机收听15分钟预先选定的音乐。无干预组接受不包括音乐的常规术后护理。
在研究结束时,我们将获得关于现场音乐或录制音乐对术后疼痛感知是否有显著影响的实证依据。我们假设现场音乐干预的影响将大于录制音乐干预,但两者都将比常规护理更能减轻疼痛感知。此外,我们将获得音乐干预期间减轻疼痛感知的生理基础的初步证据,从中可以得出未来研究的假设。
现场音乐可以缓解手术康复患者的疼痛;然而,与安排相对简单的录制音乐相比,现场音乐在多大程度上能改善患者的疼痛体验尚不清楚。本研究完成后,将能够对现场音乐和录制音乐进行统计学比较。此外,本研究还将能够深入了解术后听音乐导致疼痛感知降低所涉及的神经生理机制。
荷兰中央人类研究委员会NL76900.042.21;https://www.toetsingonline.nl/to/ccmo_search.nsf/fABRpop?readform&unids=F2CA4A88E6040A45C1258791001AEA44。
国际注册报告识别码(IRRID):PRR1-10.2196/40034。