Espinosa Nicole, Menczel Schrire Zoe, McKinnon Andrew C, Almgren Hannes, Mowszowski Loren, Naismith Sharon L
School of Psychology, Faculty of Science, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
Healthy Brain Ageing Program, Brain and Mind Centre, University of Sydney, Camperdown, Sydney, NSW, 2050, Australia.
Aging Clin Exp Res. 2025 Apr 2;37(1):113. doi: 10.1007/s40520-025-03006-7.
Evidence on the impact of music-making interventions on brain plasticity in older adults is limited.
To investigate whether music-making interventions in older adults induce neurobiological changes and if such changes relate to cognitive improvements.
A systematic search was conducted in Medline, PsycINFO, and Scopus. Inclusion criteria targeted randomised controlled trials with older adults (with and without mild cognitive impairment [MCI]), music-making interventions as exposure, and neurobiological measures as the primary outcome.
Six studies (555 cognitively intact older adults) met inclusion criteria-five used piano training, one used choral singing. Three studies had overlapping cohorts, and four had a high risk of bias. One study employed electroencephalography (EEG) to measure frontal and parietal activity, while five used structural MRI to assess cortical, subcortical, and white matter integrity. Methodological heterogeneity limited comparability. Findings in the piano group included increased frontal theta power during an improvisation task, greater grey matter volume in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and cerebellum, slower fibre density decline in the fornix and preserved grey matter volume in the right auditory cortex and hippocampus. Only one study reported a positive correlation between neurobiological changes and executive functioning improvements. No studies assessed neurobiological outcomes in MCI.
Evidence on music-making interventions and neuroplasticity in older adults remains inconclusive due to limited studies, high risk of bias, and methodological variability. While preliminary findings suggest potential neurobiological changes with music-making interventions, there is insufficient evidence to draw firm conclusions.
High-quality trials are needed to clarify the neurobiological impact of music-making, particularly in MCI populations.
关于音乐创作干预对老年人脑可塑性影响的证据有限。
研究老年人的音乐创作干预是否会引起神经生物学变化,以及这些变化是否与认知改善相关。
在Medline、PsycINFO和Scopus数据库中进行了系统检索。纳入标准针对的是有老年人(有和没有轻度认知障碍[MCI])参与的随机对照试验,以音乐创作干预为暴露因素,以神经生物学测量为主要结局。
六项研究(555名认知功能完好的老年人)符合纳入标准,五项使用钢琴训练,一项使用合唱。三项研究有重叠的队列,四项存在高偏倚风险。一项研究采用脑电图(EEG)测量额叶和顶叶活动,五项使用结构磁共振成像(MRI)评估皮质、皮质下和白质完整性。方法学异质性限制了可比性。钢琴组的研究结果包括在即兴创作任务中额叶θ波功率增加、背外侧前额叶皮质和小脑灰质体积增大、穹窿纤维密度下降减缓以及右侧听觉皮质和海马灰质体积保留。只有一项研究报告了神经生物学变化与执行功能改善之间的正相关。没有研究评估MCI患者的神经生物学结局。
由于研究有限、高偏倚风险和方法学变异性,关于老年人音乐创作干预和神经可塑性的证据仍然不确定。虽然初步研究结果表明音乐创作干预可能会引起神经生物学变化,但没有足够的证据得出确凿结论。
需要高质量的试验来阐明音乐创作的神经生物学影响,特别是在MCI人群中。