music to alleviate symptoms & anxiety in cancer patients receiving radiation and/or chemotherapy

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The Louis Armstrong Center for Music and Medicine Music to Alleviate Symptoms & Anxiety in Cancer Patients Receiving Radiation and/or Chemotherapy Andrew Rossetti MMT, MT-BC September 7 2012

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  • The Louis Armstrong Center forMusic and Medicine

    Music to Alleviate Symptoms & Anxiety in Cancer Patients Receiving Radiation and/or Chemotherapy

    Andrew Rossetti MMT, MT-BCSeptember 7 2012

  • Disclosure Information

    Nothing to Disclose

  • Identifying, encouraging, and addressing opportunitiesto recruit and retain employees through a transparent, uniform and consistent process.

    Identifying and addressing opportunities to cultivate a work environment where all hospital community members feelrespected, appreciated, and in turn are able to fully contribute to our mission.

  • Learning Objectives

    Participants will gain an understanding of the causal relationship between anxiety, emotion and painperception

    Paticipants will recognize aspects of the use of musicto modulate the perception of pain

    Paticipants will be able to explain the impact thatmusic therapy can provide on anxiety in newlydiagnosed patients undergoing simulation forradiation therapy

  • Overview

    Music Therapy to modulate oncology patients perception of pain severity

    Overview of treatment symptomatology in cancerpatients

    Emotion, traumatic response, and anxietys role in pain perception

    Musics role in altering pain response throughmodulation of affect states and anxiety

    Music Therapy program development in RadiationOncology

  • Preamble

    Patients with progressive medical illnesses, including those with cancer, experience numerous symptoms, impairments in physical and psychosocial functioning, and other problems that can undermine the quality of life. For more than a decade, pain has been recognized as a major quality of life concern for the cancer population.

    In epidemiologic surveys, relationships have been discerned between pain and various adverse phenomena, such a mood disturbance

    Portenoy, R.K. Contemporary Diagnosis and Management of Pain in Oncologic

    and AIDS Patients 1997

  • Mechanisms of Sensory BasedPain Modulation

    A variety of pain modulatory mechanisms exist in the nervous system, and these modulatory systems can be accessed through contextual and/or cognitive manipulation [1].

    Variables such as attentional state, emotional context, hypnotic suggestions, attitudes, expectations or changes in consciousness now have been shown to alter both pain perception and forebrain pain transmission in humans. [2]

    1. Fields HL. Pain modulation: expectation, opioid analgesia and virtual pain. Prog Brain Res 2000;122:245253.

    2. Villemure, C, Bushnell, M. Cognitive modulation of pain:how do attention and emotion influence pain processing? Pain 95 (2002) 195199

  • Mechanisms of Sensory BasedPain Modulation (cont.)

    These techniques alter sensory and/or affective aspects of pain perception, and the associated modulation of pain-evoked neural activity occurring in limbic and/or sensory brain regions. [1]

    Principal cognitive variables: attention and emotion

    1. Villemure, C, Bushnell, M. Cognitive modulation of pain:how do attention and emotion influence pain processing? Pain 95 (2002) 195199

  • Cognitive Variables

    Attentional: Integration in music experiencedirectionality through guided visualizationwith music. Less anxiety and pain whenfocused on physical sensations. [1]

    Emotional: Modulation of mood state throughmetaphoric content in music and reduction of treatment related state anxiety.

    1. Hadjistavropoulos HD, Hadjistavropoulos T, Quine A. Health anxiety moderates the effects of distraction versus attention to pain. Behav Res Ther 2000;38:425438.

  • Mood State / Emotion Emotion: a temporary state usually the result of some

    external event present, remembered, or anticipated

    A mental state that arises spontaneously rather than through conscious effort and is often accompanied by physiological changes; a feeling: the emotions of joy, sorrow, reverence, hate, and love. a conscious mental reaction (as anger or fear) subjectively experienced as strong feeling usually directed toward a specific object and typically accompanied by physiological and behavioral changes in the body (Merriam Webster 2011)

  • Emotions relation toPain Perception

    Psychological factors other than attention, such as mood and emotional state, also alter pain perception. Clinical studies show that emotional states and attitudes of patients have an effect on pain associated with chronic diseases [1, 2]

    The effect of emotions on pain perception is generally recognized but the underlying mechanisms remain unclear, negative emotions produced robust increases in pain - pain-related emotions influence pain perception and pain-related physiological responses [3]

    1.Haythornthwaite JA, Benrud-Larson LM. Psychological aspects of neuro- pathic pain. Clin J Pain 2000;16:S101S105. 2. Schanberg LE, Sandstrom MJ, Starr K, Gil KM, Lefebvre JC, Keefe FJ, Affleck G, Tennen H. The relationship of daily mood and stressful events to symptoms in juvenile rheumatic disease. Arthritis Care Res 2000;13:3341. 3. Pierre Rainville, P., Viet Huynh Bao, Q., Chrtien, P., Pain-related emotions modulate experimental pain perception and autonomic responses. Pain (2005) Volume: 118, Issue: 3, Publisher: Elsevier,

  • Emotions relation toPain Perception (cont.)

    The multiplicity of mechanisms underlying the emotional modulation of pain is reflective of the strong interrelations between pain and emotions, and emphasizes the powerful effects that emotions can have on pain. [1]

    It is thought that anxiety states are caused by activation of the sympathetic nervous system, potentiated by adrenaline and noradrenaline from the adrenal medulla, stimulated by the hypothalamus. This is similar to the mechanisms that produce pain Thus, anxiety may have a role in potentiating pain by enhancing physical symptoms. [2]

    2. OLeary, U.,

    1. Roy, M.,Pich, M., Chen, J., Peretz, I,. Rainville, P. Cerebral and spinal modulation of pain by emotions Retrieved http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2009/11/18/0904706106

    Psychosocial influences on pain perceptions in cancer 22 October, 2002 VOL: 98, ISSUE: 43, PAGE NO: 36 retrieved from http://www.nursingtimes.net/nursing-practice-clinical-research/psychosocial-influences-on-pain-perceptions-in-cancer/205904.article

  • Emotions relation toPain Perception (cont.)

    Pain is defined as a sensory and affective experience.

    Pain affect encompasses the negative emotions brought about by the cognitive processes underlying the elaboration of meaning and the evaluation of the significance and future implications of pain.

    Catastrophizing and fear of pain have been shown to contribute to pain severity, distress, and disability.

    Pierre Rainville, P., Viet Huynh Bao, Q., Chrtien, P., Pain-related emotions modulate experimental pain perception and autonomic responses. Pain (2005) Volume: 118, Issue: 3, Publisher: Elsevier,

  • Emotions relation toPain Perception (cont.)

    Perception of pain intensity has been shown to be directly modulated by anxiety through strong reciprocal connections between amygdala and entorhinal cortex

    Ploghaus A, Narain C, Beckmann CF, Clare S, Bantick S, Wise R, Matthews PM, Rawlins JN, Tracey I. Exacerbation of pain by anxiety is associated with activity in a hippocampal network. J Neurosci 2001;21:98969903. Pitkanen A, Pikkarainen M, Nurminen N, Ylinen A. Reciprocal connec- tions between the amygdala and the hippocampal formation, perirhinal cortex, and postrhinal cortex in rat. A review. Ann NY Acad Sci 2000;911:369391.

  • Affect

    Positive affect is associated with increased brain dopamine levels, notably in frontal cortical areas The concept that positive affect results in the release of dopamine and in turn influences cognitive functioning could well be extended to pain, since animal behavioral and neurophysio-logical studies provide considerable evidence for a role of forebrain dopaminergic systems in pain and analgesia

    Ashby FG, Isen AM, Turken AU. A neuropsychological theory of positive affect and its influence on cognition. Psychol Rev 1999;106:529550.

    Magnusson JE, Fisher K. The involvement of dopamine in nociception: the role of D(1) and D(2) receptors in the dorsolateral striatum. Brain Res 2000;855:260266.

  • Oncology Units Served by the Music Therapy Department

    St. Lukes Roosevelt Hospital Chemotherapy Suite Beth Israel Hospital Inpatient oncology unit Pre/post surgery and palliative care Phillips Ambulatory Care Center Radiation Oncology Unit, Chemotherapy suite Comprehensive Cancer Care Center West Campus - Radiation Oncology Unit,

    Chemotherapy suite, Breast Cancer Unit

  • Radiation Therapy

    External Beam Radiation

    Brachytherapy (radioactive implants)

    The majority of patients receive a combination orsequence of treatments including: surgery, hormone therapy, immunotherapy, chemotherapy and radiationtherapy

    Variant True Beam Cyclotron

  • Radiation Oncology

    In the US, 2/3 of patients diagnosed with cancer receive radiation therapy [1]

    Few therapeutic modalities in medicine cause more confusion, fear, and anxiety as does the use of radiation in the treatment of cancer [2]

    The treatment of breast and head & neck cancer frequently includesradiation therapy, which, given its severe side effects, leads to a stronglysignificant decline in quality of life [3]

    The literature shows that patients with head & neck cancer in particular suffer from high levels of anxiety. [4]

    1. Benchmark Survey 20042. Weintraub 20013. Clover 20114. Weintraub 2001, Hamen 2008, Ledeboer 2003

  • Symptomatology related to Radiation Therapy

    DepressionAnxiety disordersInsomniaSituational traumaFeelings of Loss physical, psychosocial, existentialPsychosocial dysfunctionConfusion / DisorientationPain

  • Pain Perception

    Pain is always subjective.

    Each individual learns the application of the word through experiences related to injury in early life. Biologists recognize that those stimuli which cause pain are liable to damage tissue. Accordingly, pain is that experience we associate with actual or potential tissue damage. It is unquestionably a sensation in a part or parts of the body, but it is also always unpleasant and therefore also an emotional experience.

    Experiences which resemble pain but are not unpleasant, e.g., pricking, should not be called pain. Unpleasant abnormal experiences (dysesthesias) may also be pain but are not necessarily so because, subjectively, they may not have the usual sensory qualities of pain.

    Part III: Pain Terms, A Current List with Definitions and Notes on Usage" (pp 209-214) Classification of Chronic Pain, Second Edition, IASP Task Force on Taxonomy, edited

    by H. Merskey and N. Bogduk, IASP Press, Seattle, 1994 2011

  • Pain Experienced During Treatmentfor Cancer

    Joint pain from taxotere chemo therapy Post surgical, neuropathic, or nociceptive pain Changes in anatomy - tissue variation from radiation, resection, Cancer or Malignant Pain Needle sticks trypanophobia may lead to a generalized fear of medical

    procedures and agliophobia (fear of pain). Can create a cycle of distress leading to increased levels of pain perception.

    Affects an estimated 10% of Americans recognized as a specific phobia in DSM IV 1994 characterized by feelings of panic and heightened sensitivity to painful stimulii, lead to and rise in RR HR and blood pressure, it may also be accompanied by sudden drops in blood pressure and heart rate

    Hamilton, James G. Needle phobia: a neglected diagnosis. Journal of Family Practice. August, 1995. June 28, 2008.

  • Acute Cancer Pain Syndromes

    Acute pain associated with diagnostic proceduresLumbar puncture, Venipuncture, Paracentesis (belly tap), Thoracentesis (chest tap)

    Acute Post-operative pain

    Acute pain associated with chemotherapy infusion techniquesIntervenous infusion pain (venous spasm, extravasation, phlebitis) Hepatic arteryinfusion pain, Headache caused by intrathecal chemotherapy

    Acute pain associated with chemotherapy toxicityMucositis, painful peripheral neuropathy, diffuse bone or muscle pain

    Acute pain associated with radiation therapyMucositis, radiation enteritis and protocolitis

    Acute tumor-related pain

  • Music as Therapeutic Tool

    Music - a complex phenomena Music perception involves acoustic analysis, auditory memory,

    auditory scene analysis, processing of interval relations, of musical syntax and semantics, and activation of (pre)motor representations of actions. Moreover, music perception potentially elicits emotions, thus giving rise to the modulation of emotional effector systems such as the subjective feeling system, the autonomic nervous system, the hormonal, and the immune system.

  • The Pros and Cons of Live Music? + More expensive to

    implement a music therapy program-certified music therapist

    + Generalizing Results: Difficult to quantify the effectiveness of individual music therapy treatment plan.

    + Shift composition according to mood and preference of patient

    + Change tempo of music according to HR, RR of patient-entrain

    + Ability to control volume, regulate dynamic shifts

    + Enhance a feeling of reciprocity otherwise unavailable.

    + Provide clinical conditions and on-going updates to medical team.

  • Basis for use on Music in Clinical Contexts

    Five factors which contribute to the effects of musictherapy. These modulating factors are: attention, emotion, cognition, behavior, and communication.

    Music can automatically capture attention integrating one in theexperience

    Music can modulate activity of all major limbic and paralimbic brainstructures, that is, structures crucially involved in the initiation, gen-eration, maintenance, termination, and modulation of emotions.

    Music is in essence an associative experience. Music can be employed as a situmulus to influence behavior Music can be used to convey important information to patients

  • Clinical Properties of Music

    Entrainment A physiological phenomenum of syncronization of diverse functions of the organism with theelements of music rhythm, melodic contour, and anticipation/resolution

    Music is by nature metaphoric. Metaphors create images. We think in words and images. Images can be created and directed through music, thus directing the person.

    Music affects and modulates emotion. Emotions produce physiological changes in the organism.

  • Areas a Intervention with Music Therapy

    Simulation Oncology Waiting Areas Radiation Therapy Treatment

    Rooms Chemotherapy Infusion Suite Music Psychotherapy Pre/Post

    Radiation/Chemo Procedural Support (hydration,

    venipunctures, blood draws)

  • Simulation and the Impact of Situational Trauma

    Simulation: The first intervention a patient experiences in radiation therapy, isphysically un-painful. Yet, it is often described by patients as being one of themoments of greatest anxiety of their entire treatment trajectory.

  • Simulation and the Impact of Situational Trauma( Cont.)

    Important to look at past hospitalization and trauma (especially medical trauma) and the patients who fair well through traumatic experiences will fair better in treatmentEl trauma and its effects may influence a persons capacity to heal and find/maintainhomestatic states.

    Patients that acknowledge the emotional severity of a stressor fare better than those that deny it. Therefore, clearly labeling the treatment experience as emotionally traumatic can be therapeutic

    Peebles-Kleiger MJ. Pediatric and neonatal intensive care hospitalization as traumaticstressor: implications for intervention. PMID: 10842450 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

  • Placement of Positional Device

  • Mask in place

  • Associations

  • Trauma Theory

    EtimoIogy - "Trauma from the Greek for "a wound and, importantly for "

    DSM IV-TR-2000 DEFINITION:

    The person has been exposed to a traumatic event in which both of the following have been present: experienced, witnessed, confronted with an event involving actual or

    threatened death or serious injury, threat to physical integrity of self or others.

    response involved intense fear, helplessness, or horror.

  • Trauma Theory

    Dyadic Regulation of Affective StatesThe dyadic regulation of affective states through fluctuations in voice, gaze, rhythm, touch, and timing is a fundamental aspect of interpersonal interaction throughout the lifespan. [1]

    Trauma therapy in essence involves undoing the individual's aloneness in the face of overwhelming emotions.

    The process of moment-to-moment mutual coordination and affect regulation is considered to be the fundamental mechanism by which attachment is established [2]

    1. Fosha, D The Dyadic Regulation Of Affect Journal of Clinical Psychology/In Session, 2001, 57 (2)

    2. Schore, A. N. (1994). Affect regulation and the origin of the self: The neurobiology of emotional development. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.

  • Trauma Theory

    Overwhelming life experienceShock, Developmental, Mass trauma

    Physiological and biological in nature

    Can be stored as sense memory in the body

    Continuity between neuro-physiological and psychological processing

  • Current Trauma Theory

    Polyvagal Theory

    Music has been used to calm, to enable feelings of safety, to build a sense of community and to reduce the social distance between people.

    Music is intertwined with emotions, affect regulation, interpersonal social behavior, and other psychological processes related to personal responses to environmental, interpersonal, and intrapersonal challenges

    Provides a strategy to understand the mechanisms and processes that enable music and music therapy to improve social engagement behaviors and to facilitate the regulation of bodily and behavioral states.

    Stephen Porges

  • Polyvagal Theory (cont.)

    Differentiation of Reptilian / Mamalian Vagus - Vagal control of Autonomic Nervous System (Sympathetic / Parasympathetic)

    Hierarchal Response to stress -Social Engagement System (Homeostatic) Defensive Fight or Flight Response Overwhelm, Shut-down, Freezing

    Trauma can turn off the Social Engagement System. Attempts to engage a person with a trauma history, rather that eliciting spontaneous social behavior, may trigger defensive and aggressive behaviors.

    Music can be used to regulate vagal response

    Modulation of middle ear muscles (listening to specific frequencies) Modulation of the laryngeal and pharyngeal muscles (singing) Modulation of the facial and oral muscles supporting an embouchure

    Leading to pro-social behaviorStephen PorgesPorges SW.

    The polyvagal theory: new insights into adaptive reactions of the autonomic nervoussystem. Cleve Clin J Med. 2009 Apr;76 Suppl 2:S86-90. Review.PMID: 19376991 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

  • Polyvagal Theory (cont.)

    Social Engagement System

    Involves pathways that travel through cranial nerves (V, VII, IX, XI)

    Modulation of middle ear muscles Modulation of the laryngeal and pharyngeal muscles Modulation of the facial and oral muscles supporting an embouchure

    Music triggers neural mechanisms that regulate the entire Social Engagement System with the resultant changes in facial affect and autonomic state. Leading to avoidance of fight/flight response, promotes feelings of safety, and facilitates spontaneous social behavior

    Stephen Porges

    Physiol Behav. 2003 Aug;79(3):503-13. Review.PMID: 12954445 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

    Porges SW. The Polyvagal Theory: phylogenetic contributions to social behavior.

  • Music Psychotherapy Intervention Prior to Simulation

    Assessment: Level of state anxiety, exisitance of previous trauma related to medical intervention, history of claustrophobic events, personality profile, reading of patients transference / counter-transference, psychosocial history

    Two part Intervention:

    1. Relaxation altered state induction with music incorporation(body awareness) to unite psyche & soma. Psychoeducationon techniques for focus and comfort to be used duringsimulation

    2. Guided Visualization Music/ verbal induction into a deepertrance state to enhance relaxation. Suggestion. Visualizationmay be used by patient during treatment.

  • Music Therapy Intervention During Simulation and Radiation Therapy

    Pre-recorded prescribed music program

    Music organizes time in such a way that the passage of time is perceived thus avoiding temporal distortion

    Music therapy assessment: Determine patientssignificant music.

    Construction of prescribed music program based onpatients profile and assessment of state anxietyfollowing the parameters of a music elementscharactarization guide

  • Music Psychotherapy

    Individual sessions to address:

    Anxiety Pain managment techniques Process trauma Provide perspective on psychosocial concerns Enhance resillience

  • The Waiting Area

    Distortion of temporal perception

    Long waits, being ill, surrounded by others who are also ill : a petrie dish for anxietyAnxiety: a multi-systemic response to a perceived threat or stressor.Theanticipation of impending danger and dread accompanied by restlessness, tension, rapid heartbeat, and rapid breathing that may or may not be associated with a certain event or situation. (Mosbys Medical Dictionary 2011)

    May lead to the breakdown of the therapeutic relationshipbetween patient and medical staff

  • Procedural Support

  • Environmental Music Therapy Definition

    Environmental Music Therapy is the intentional use of live music and sound to modulate the soundscape of an area or space.

    EMT has the capacity to transform an environment into one more conducive to healing and wellbeing by means of an interactive process between the person(s) actively providing EMT and those actively receiving it.

  • Environmental Music Therapy

    Relationship of individuals in an environment is not passive, but transactional and integrative.

    Environments are perceived as an integrated experience: a time & space.

    A whole constructed of physical, cultural and social elements.

    Music used is incorporative of these elements and also merge emotional and aesthetic elements.

    Music is an evocative and directive means of communication, and through its metaphoric properties stimulates images.

    Stimulation of images is a means to referential ideation.

    Mazer SE. Assessing and resolving hospital noise issues. Health Facil Manage. 2005;18:24-29. Available at: http://www.healinghealth.com/d-resources/documents/Mazer_HearHear.pdf. Accessed March 30, 2008.

  • EMT

    Designed to address environmental sounds perceived as noise [1]

    Use of music by a trained music therapist who uses music to meld and soften the constantly occurring barrage of noise

    Music therapist can play with as opposed to play to the environment [1]

    Purposeful, Intentional Modulate of staffs, personal caregivers, and patients perception

    in fragile environments modulating external ambient stressors to form a non-noxious

    soundscape provides a means for more positive mood states Does not mask sounds but incorporates them

    1. Stewart, K. & Schneider, S. (2000) Environmental Music Therapy. In Loewy J. V. (Ed) Music therapy in the NICU. NY, NY : Satchnote Armstrong Press.

  • EMT Construct

    Interactivity and correlation between stress, emotion, pain

    Emotion affects the perception of pain (biopsychosocial perspective through which pain is viewed as a complex, multifaceted experience emerging from the dynamic interplay of a patients physiological state, thoughts, emotions, behaviors, and sociocultural influences.) [1]

    The International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP) defines pain as an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage, or described in terms of such damage

    Psychol Res Behav Manag. 2011; 4: 4149.

    1. Rodit, D., Robinson, ME.,The role of psychological interventions in the management of patients with chronic pain

  • EMT: Working Hypothesis

    Stress affects the perception of pain

    Music impacts and can modulate both emotion and stress and through this process can affect the perception of pain. [1]

    Music powerfully stimulates socio-emotional processes, which, in turn, positively affect mood [1]

    The environment of care is so integrated into the human experience that it is inseparable from the effects of medication diagnoses, stress, anxiety, pain, and similarly, noise and music [2]

    International Handbook of Occupational TherapyInterventions Springer, Jun 23, 2009

    Investigating emotion with music: An fMRI study Human Brain Mapping

    1. Dileo, S. ,

    2. Koelsch, S., Volume 27, Issue 3, pages 239250, March 2006

  • ExperientialThese are actual ambient sounds recorded on

    an treatment area. We invite you to focus on these sounds and perhaps imagine what it would like to be a patient in this treatment area, seriously ill and perhaps suffering through acute pain while hearing these sounds..

  • Research Projects Effects of an Integrative Music Therapy Program on the Perception Noise in the

    SICU: A Patient, Caregiver, and Physician/Nurse Environmental Study n=120 Clinical Music Improvisation and Infusion Study at St Luke's Roosevelt. Music

    therapists are investigating the impact of clinical music improvisation on resiliency of patients receiving infusion therapy. n=75

    The Impact of Music Therapy on State Anxiety in Cancer Patients Undergoing Simulation (Radiation Therapy) n=60

    The Effect of EMT on Anxiety Levels and Perception of Waiting Time in the Radiation Oncology Waiting Room n= 80

    The Effects of Music Therapy in the Recovery of Patients Undergoing Spine Surgery. Music therapists are measuring the effects of live music applications in pain and recovery of SPINE patients. n=75

    + Completed+ EEG Sedation Study: Chloral Hydrate vs. Entrained Lullabies n=60+ Heather-on Earth Multi-site Music Therapy Study: n=270

    10 NICUs (Heather on Earth)-TRAINING-International Summit-Remo+ AIP (Asthma Initiative Program): n=200+/Clinic/3 schools-Bronx,

    Brooklyn, Lower East Side + Music for AIR (Advances in Respiration) n=200 Clinic, CCR, Nursing

    Homes

  • Music & Health Clinic

    Musicians and performing artists have specific medical and health needs related to the unique physical, mental and emotional demands of their profession. Performance can be stifled by

    Overuse injuries Scar tissue from surgical procedures Side effects from medication Anxiety, chronic fatigue, focusing difficulties Performers report a high incidence of

    depression and chemical dependency Interventions include:

    Tonal intervallic synthesis Vibration and Clinical music improvisation Music-assisted relaxation, guided visualization

    and stress management

  • Submit manuscript through the Music and Medicine online submission and review system at

    http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/mmd

  • MUSIC AND MEDICINEEditorsJoanne V. Loewy, DA, LCAT, MT-BCThe Louis Armstrong Center for Music and MedicineBeth Israel Medical Center, New York, NY, U.S.A.

    Ralph Spintge, MDSportkrankenhaus Hellersen, Luedenscheid, Germany, and the University for Music and Drama HfMT, Hamburg, Germany

    Music and Medicine is a new international journal that offers an integrative forum for clinical practice & research of applied music in medical settings & allied institutions. Empirical research studies, clinical case reports, and applied models explicating theory and practice across the health, behavioral and neurosciences. Emphasis is placed on research practices that integrate music, music psychology, music cognition, music neurology, music therapy, and infant & early child development applied medical practice and knowledge. Research and clinical practices related to music psychotherapy and wellness practices is inclusive of the health of musicians Methodology favor quantitative and qualitative research outcomes.

    Topics include:Analgesia and Music SedationCancer Care: Active and Receptive Music ApproachesCardiology and Rhythm Clinical Improvisation in Health and DiseaseDementia, Stroke and Music Memory Environmental ICU Music Infant StimulationMedical Conditions and Treatment of MusiciansMood Disorders and Music PsychologyMusic in Transition: NICU, Hospice to End of LifeMusic in Surgery: Pre-op to post-opMusic in Traumatic Response and InjuryNeurologic Music ApproachesPain and Palliative Medical Music StrategiesPsychosocial Music InterventionsRespiratory Music Advances: Asthma, CF, COPD

    TO SUBMIT: http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/mmd

  • Contact Info & TrainingAndrew Rossetti MMT, MT-BC [email protected]

    Telephone: 1.212.420-2710

    Mailing Address: Beth Israel Medical Center Louis Armstrong Ctr Music & Medicine

    6 Silver 21- 1st Ave & 16th StNY, NY 10003 Website:

    www.musicandmedicine.orgWe offer trainings for MDs, RNs and others. 2 day, weekly and monthly orientations and observations-hands on experiences.

    To join: International Association for Music & Medicine

    www.iammonline.com

    Slide Number 1Disclosure InformationSlide Number 3Learning ObjectivesOverview PreambleMechanisms of Sensory Based Pain Modulation Mechanisms of Sensory Based Pain Modulation (cont.)Cognitive VariablesMood State / EmotionEmotions relation to Pain PerceptionEmotions relation to Pain Perception (cont.)Emotions relation to Pain Perception (cont.)Emotions relation to Pain Perception (cont.)AffectOncology Units Served by the Music Therapy DepartmentSlide Number 17Radiation TherapyRadiation OncologySymptomatology related to Radiation TherapyPain PerceptionPain Experienced During Treatment for CancerAcute Cancer Pain SyndromesMusic as Therapeutic ToolSlide Number 25Basis for use on Music in Clinical ContextsClinical Properties of MusicAreas a Intervention with Music Therapy Simulation and the Impact of Situational Trauma Simulation and the Impact of Situational Trauma( Cont.)Placement of Positional DeviceMask in placeAssociationsTrauma TheoryTrauma TheoryTrauma TheoryCurrent Trauma Theory Polyvagal Theory (cont.)Polyvagal Theory (cont.)Music Psychotherapy Intervention Prior to SimulationMusic Therapy Intervention During Simulation and Radiation Therapy Music Psychotherapy The Waiting AreaProcedural SupportEnvironmental Music Therapy DefinitionEnvironmental Music TherapyEMTEMT ConstructEMT: Working HypothesisExperientialSlide Number 51Slide Number 52Submit manuscript through the Music and Medicine online submission and review system at http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/mmdSlide Number 54Slide Number 55