Ballmann Christopher G, Rogers Rebecca R, Porrill Sophia L, Washmuth Nicholas B
Department of Human Studies, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL 35294, USA.
Department of Physical Therapy, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL 35209, USA.
Neurol Int. 2025 Jul 11;17(7):106. doi: 10.3390/neurolint17070106.
The ergogenic effects of music have been well described across various modes of exercise with widespread use across competitive athletes and recreational exercisers alike. Underlying the acute beneficial effects of music during exercise are profound physiological and psychological changes which involve an array of different organ systems, including but not limited to cardiovascular, endocrine, skeletal muscle, and nervous systems. While the use of music to enhance physical performance and improve associated mechanisms has been largely optimized in healthy individuals, the investigations of the translation to individuals with neurological conditions are still ongoing. Recently, it has been established that the personalization of music interventions greatly influences performance-enhancing benefits and aids in physical performance optimization in healthy individuals. Self-selected music (SSM) has been documented to impart ergogenic advantages over pre-determined or non-preferred music, including improved cardiorespiratory endurance, power development, and velocity of movement which are characterized by adaptative physiological and psychological changes. Evidence of the benefits of SSM has progressed to the degree to which the overlap of possible benefits between healthy and clinical populations is becoming more apparent. This aim of this theoretical review is to discuss how personalized music influences psychophysiological determinants of exercise ability in healthy individuals and consider how these findings may be applicable to neurological conditions to enhance exercise capacity. The current knowledge on the role of SSM in augmenting physiological and psychological responses to exercise in healthy individuals is presented along with how these mechanisms might be leveraged to overcome exercise limitations in neurological conditions. Overall, SSM appears to have theoretical support to be a promising therapeutic approach to improving exercise ability in neurological conditions through similar ergogenic mechanisms documented in healthy individuals, but further investigation is warranted.
音乐的促力作用已在各种运动模式中得到充分描述,在竞技运动员和休闲锻炼者中都有广泛应用。运动期间音乐的急性有益作用背后是深刻的生理和心理变化,这些变化涉及一系列不同的器官系统,包括但不限于心血管系统、内分泌系统、骨骼肌系统和神经系统。虽然在健康个体中,利用音乐提高身体表现和改善相关机制已在很大程度上得到优化,但将其应用于神经系统疾病患者的研究仍在进行中。最近,已经确定音乐干预的个性化极大地影响了健康个体的表现增强益处,并有助于优化身体表现。有文献记载,自选音乐(SSM)比预先确定的或非偏好的音乐具有促力优势,包括改善心肺耐力、力量发展和运动速度,这些都表现为适应性的生理和心理变化。SSM益处的证据已经发展到健康人群和临床人群之间可能存在的益处重叠变得更加明显的程度。这篇理论综述的目的是讨论个性化音乐如何影响健康个体运动能力的心理生理决定因素,并考虑这些发现如何适用于神经系统疾病以提高运动能力。本文介绍了关于SSM在增强健康个体运动生理和心理反应方面作用的现有知识,以及如何利用这些机制克服神经系统疾病中的运动限制。总体而言,SSM似乎有理论支持,通过健康个体中记录的类似促力机制,有望成为改善神经系统疾病运动能力的一种有前景的治疗方法,但仍需进一步研究。