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Music in the Operating Room: For surgeons, this time

March 8th, 2011 · Music and Dental Surgery, Music and Surgery, Music and the Mind-Body, Music in the Hospital

Music and medicine are deeply connected. But what kind of music should your surgeon really be listening to?

BY RAHUL PARIKH

iStockphoto/lisagagne/Salon

PopRX is a new weekly column about the intersection of pop culture and medicine.

In 1889 Nietzsche wrote, “Without music life would be a mistake.” As someone who regularly spends a chunk of change on Radiohead and Bright Eyes, I completely agree. I’m not the only doctor who finds nirvana in Nirvana. There’s a reason hospital dramas always feature surgeons listening to — and arguing about — music in the operating room. It’s because music and medicine are deeply connected.

The fascinating links go back as far back as ancient Greece. Apollo, the God of healing, was often depicted with a harplike instrument called a lyre. Some doctors have doubled as musicians. In the 1950s, a group of doctors at the Mayo Clinic started the Notochords (named after the primitive spine in a developing fetus), playing with Duke Ellington and Jack Benny. More recently, NPR ran a story about an orchestra of doctors from Albert Einstein Medical Center in New York.

Surgeons have a particularly profound relationship to music. As Siddhartha Mukherjee noted in his book “The Emperor of All Maladies,” music and medicine “go hand in hand. Both push manual skill to the limit; both mature with practice; both depend on immediacy, precision and opposable thumbs.” A 2008 study, in fact, tested whether musical prowess has any impact on performance during laparoscopic procedures (special scopes that surgeons use to perform minimally invasive procedures). Non-surgeons who had experience playing music performed better at suturing using this equipment than did non-musical participants. There’s perhaps no better example of the facility of the musician-surgeon than Theodor Billroth, a 19th century virtuoso who pioneered surgical techniques to dissect abdominal tumors from the body and whose talent on violin and piano forged a close friendship with Brahms.

But surgeons don’t have to play instruments to enjoy music in the operating room. It’s a regular, enjoyable part of the daily routine and one way a surgeon creates a comfortable atmosphere in a sometimes tense setting. Atul Gawande, contributor to the New Yorker and author of “The Checklist Manifesto,” operates to Modest Mouse, Arcade Fire, the Decemberists and other alternative bands. (He does own a Fender ’62 Stratocaster replica at home, but he says he’s rusty.)

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Salon.com The truth about music in the operating room 3/8/11 11:29 AM

So is operating to music a good idea? Lest you go into a panic the next time you hear Lady Gaga while they’re administering the laughing gas, the answer seems to be yes.

It’s a bit of a tricky thing to prove. It’s far from ethical to take a group of surgeons and measure their performance on and off music while they cut into real patients. But studies have offered some insight into the effects of music on surgical performance. One is from the Journal of the American Medical Association and dates back to the grunge rock era, 1994. In this study, researchers took 50 surgeons and measured blood pressure, heart rate and other physiological markers while they performed a series of subtraction problems. Each volunteer performed this task while listening to self-selected music and, later, music selected by the researchers (“Pachelbel’s Canon in D,” which is supposedly included in a lot of “stress reduction” musical compilations).

It turns out that when surgeons listened to music of their own choosing they had very steady vital signs and performed the subtraction task better than when they listened to Pachelbel. That’s encouraging, though it’s important to note that the surgeons who participated listened to music regularly both in and out of the operating room. So if you’re a surgeon and you think investing in an iPod will make you better with a scalpel and sutures, first ask yourself whether you care for music to begin with.

What about the rest of the operating room team? Anesthesiologists are, of course, indispensable to surgery. Does music help or hurt them? In a study out of the U.K., where 70 percent of anesthesiologists say they’ve been subjected to music in the operating theatre (as the Brits call it), 63 percent of those surveyed said that they enjoyed the sounds of music while they worked. Those in another survey who did not said it was because they felt music reduced their vigilance and impaired communication with other staff members. Not surprisingly, the most distracting tunes were ones they hated the most. On the other hand, another study contradicted any deleterious effect of music on anesthesiologists’ performance: That study measured psychomotor performance, and it didn’t change when subjects were listening to self-chosen music, Pachelbel, white noise or no music at all. Finally, surveys of other O.R. team members (nurses, techs, etc.) indicate that music enhances teamwork and communication among members, though, again, most of those surveyed listened to music regularly on their own time.

The next logical question to ask is: What kind of music should your surgeon be listening to while he or she closes your grapefruit of a hernia or bypasses your clogged coronaries? A study from 1976 suggested that rock (sorry, disco), with its varying rhythm and intensity was best. Other surveys have shown that the preferred genre in the operating room is classical, followed by folk, rock, jazz and blues. But, like the JAMA study I mentioned above, most studies hint that music’s positive effects have more do with the personal preference of the surgeon or the O.R. team than any particular genre of it.

A couple of last points: First, there is a body of evidence that music also helps patients going to surgery, including reducing anxiety before and after an operation; it may help patients cope better with pain, leading to their requiring less pain medicine. Finally, here’s an interesting B-side to this story: Take a listen to a 2001 album called “A Chance to Cut Is a Chance to Cure” by a San Francisco music group named Matmos. The two members of the group, Drew Daniel and Martin Schmidt, took their recording equipment to the hospital and sampled the sounds of surgery, creating electronica out of them. Highlights include “California Rhinoplasty” and “Lasik.” Let the sounds of cauterized flesh and dripping anesthetic be music to your ears.

— Rahul Parikh

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Remember the Swingle Singers?

February 15th, 2011 · Movie Music, music and the heart, Music and the Mind-Body, Music Healing

 

When I was in high school, I was introduced to the Swingle Singers, singing their fabulous arrangements of Bach preludes and fugues, Scarlatti sonatas, and all kinds of wondrous musical confections.  Only in my later years have I even become familiar with the music of people like Jerome Kern and even then, only because I went to see the film “Mrs. Henderson Presents.”  This song was featured prominently in that film, though not in the arrangement by Ward Swingle.  I just discovered this on YouTube and wanted to share it with my readers.  It certainly cheered up what was becoming a very gloomy evening for me!  I think I’ll listen to it at least 4 or 5 more times this evening to remind myself that music can cure even the gloomiest situation.  Hope you enjoy it too!

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Creating Love and Passion with Music

February 14th, 2011 · music and the heart, Music and the Mind-Body, Music Healing

Can music actually create love and passion in your relationship? I certainly think so! Almost everyone remembers certain love songs that remind them of the one they love or loved. Music has a powerful effect on the mind-body connection and when things are NOT going well in your relationship, sometime listening to the songs that brought you together and talking about the memories related to those songs can actually begin to soften the hard edges and re-create some of those vibes!
Are you surprises? I have created an ebook for your with specific step-by-step exercises you can do with your spouse or partner. Click here to get an immediate download of Creating Love and Passion with Music. I think you’ll like it!

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Is all rap bad?? Of course not!

February 9th, 2011 · Music and Emotion, Music Healing, Rap Music Can Heal

When I wrote this post, I never dreamed I would get so many comments from other people, I’ve chosen to post just a select few, but the fun thing is that so many people recognize “Fur Elise” prominently featured in this wonderful hip=hop song!!

I’m always taken aback when someone says to me that they “hate” rap music, or that it’s nothing but noise and hateful, dangerous messages.   It’s what I call “contempt prior to investigation.”  In my experience, there is no class, category or genre of music that is totally without merit…including rap.

I don’t remember when I first heard this song, but it was probably around 2003?  I was driving to Hilton Head Island for a wonderful vacation and the radio stations were limited, so I was just listening to whatever the strongest signal was and trying to learn a little about other kinds of music than my preferred kind.  Suddenly this song came on and the words just blew me away.  I loved it!!  I did my best to find out who the artist was and what the name of it was.

I was playing it for a colleague the other day who pointed out to me that underlying the whole song is a motive from Beethoven’s “Fur Elise!”  I couldn’t believe that that had not risen to my consciousness but there it was.  I hope you’ll enjoy this,  listen to it many times and share it with friends.

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Surgical Headphones Being Used in More Hospitals

February 6th, 2011 · Music and Dental Surgery, Music and Surgery, Music and the Brain, Music Healing, Music Medicine, Music Research, Surgery with Music

Safer Surgery, Faster Recovery! More and more people are hearing about our Surgical Serenity Headphones and choosing to use them.  People remember reading about them and know  that they will use them if they are told that they need surgery.  That’s exactly what happened with a customer today and she  will be “practicing” with them over the next few weeks so that she automatically relaxes and calms down when she hears this particular music.

For people who don’t happen to live in Louisville, KY, they are readily available online!  Surgical Serenity Headphones are also being test and several key hospitals around the country and just this week I talked with two more hospitals about research and testing.  There are so many interesting studies that people people are devising for me; studies that look not only at the headphones ability to decrease the amount of pain medication, but also comparing our headphones to acupuncture, and another looking at whether people wearing our headphones and listening to our proprietary music perhaps leave the hospital sooner, thus getting back to their homes and lives sooner as well as allowing the hospital to see more patients.  Lots of good information to be gathered.

As a matter of fact, I’ve sold so many lately that my inventory is getting low so I’ll be ordering another 100 or so soon.  The price on the new ones may have to go up so if you want some, now would be an excellent time!  Surgical Serenity Headphones.

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Fear of the Dentist: How much could music headphones help?

February 3rd, 2011 · Music and Dental Surgery, Music and Relaxation, Music Healing, Music in the Hospital, Music in the News!

Nearly one-quarter of all Americans avoid dentists because they’re afraid, according to American Dental Association surveys. And the fear comes in many forms.

In an attempt to win back fearful patients, dentists like Dr. Eda Ellis in New York offer spa-like services. WSJ’s health columnist Melinda Beck reports.

There’s fear of pain, fear of needles, fear of drills, fear of blood, fear of gagging, fear of feeling helpless or having personal space violated, fear of being lectured for not brushing or flossing adequately and fear of being admonished for staying away so long.

“I even hate that sucky thing that vacuums up your saliva,” says Carolyn Moody, a Bridgewater, N.J., mother of three who avoided dentists for 10 years. Now she makes sure to bring her iPod. “As soon as I hear that drill, even from another room, my fists clench, my body stiffens and my heart starts pounding,” she adds.

Of course, delaying cleanings and checkups only compounds dental problems. Neglected plaque creates cavities; cavities can lead to root canals; root canals require crowns and eventually implants or dentures or worse, a mouthful of toothless gums. Some oral-health problems also send bacteria into the bloodstream, raising the risk of heart attack, diabetes and dementia.

Ways to Make the Chair Less Scary

Dan Picasso

Sedation. From nitrous oxide (laughing gas) to tranquillizer pills to intravenous drugs, patients now have many options to lessen their awareness of what’s going on in the dentist’s chair. Dentists must have special training and certification to give some forms of sedation, and patients must be accompanied to and from the dentist’s office.

Pain killers. Numbing sprays, gels and patches can make cleanings less arduous and reduce the pain of injections. Local anesthesia can sometimes be delivered with electricity from outside the mouth, or with computer-controlled devices that regulate the flow of anesthetic.

Entertainment. Headphones, flat-screen TVs—even virtual reality goggles for watching movies—can help patients pretend they are somewhere else.

Atmospherics. Quieter drills and citrus-scented candles help mask the typical sounds and smells of dentistry; some practices have stopped using eugenol, the clove-scented antiseptic; others even bake cookies to introduce a soothing aroma.

Spa services. Foot massages, warm neck rolls and paraffin treatments for hands help patients relax and pass the time. Whitening, veneers and other cosmetic treatments can lure in patients who would otherwise dread dentistry.

Now, many dentists are taking pains to win frightened patients back. Some practices let patients virtually sleep through the procedure. Others focus on maximizing soothing distractions while minimizing pain as well as the typical sounds and smells of dentistry that can trigger unpleasant memories.

Dental schools are also paying more attention to communication skills. At New York University College of Dentistry, third-year students practice interviewing patients—played by actors—with a variety of dental problems and phobias.

“You can’t just say, ‘Open up—you have nothing to fear,’ ” says psychologist Hillary Broder, who teaches the course. “You have to establish a rapport and find out what makes them anxious and reassure them that that’s not going to happen.”

“There is usually something that triggers that phobia, like a bad experience when they were a child,” says David Hershkowitz, associate chairman of the school’s department of Cariology and Comprehensive Care. He tells students, “Once you know the trigger point, you can do away with the fear.”

To be sure, not all dentists want to treat anxious patients. “There’s a fair number of dentists who are more phobic of the phobic patients than the phobic patients are of dentistry. They’re difficult to work on and you can’t work at your normal pace says George Kivowitz who has dental practices in New York City and Newtown, Pa. But he finds that kindness and communication can go a long way toward calming patients. “I promise that if I see an area of decay, I don’t have to prove it to you by peeling you off the ceiling.”

Other dentists aren’t eager to work with anxious patients, others have built their practices around treating them. “I have some who go into a full-blown panic attack, shaking uncontrollably, when I merely look in their mouths with a mirror. That’s my flock,” says Manhattan dentist Louis Siegelman.

Feeling Groggy

For some such patients, being asleep or close to it may be the only way to endure dental procedures—even routine cleanings. “You have to meet the patients where they are,” says Dr. Siegelman.

The mildest and most common form of sedation, nitrous oxide—or “laughing gas”—has been used in dentistry since the frontier days and is still considered effective for reducing pain and relieving anxiety. About 35% of dentists offer it. But some patients can’t tolerate wearing a mask over their nose during the dental work, and in rare cases, it can make people more jittery and anxious instead of less.

Oral conscious sedation, in which patients take a tranquillizer such as Halcion or Versed before the visit, puts them into a relaxed and sleepy state although they can still respond to the dentist’s commands. Patients may have little memory of the dental work, but are so groggy they must be accompanied to and from the dentist’s office.

Intravenous sedation gives patients an even greater feeling of being “out,” and can be very useful for extensive gum or implant surgery. It also works quickly and can be increased or counteracted quickly, if necessary. But it does require a needle. The patient’s heart rate, blood pressure and oxygen intake must be monitored in case of cardiac arrest or other problems. And the dentist needs additional training and certification as well as higher malpractice insurance to cover the added risk. General anesthesia, in which the patient is unconscious and unable to respond to commands, is mainly used for oral surgery. That requires even more specialized training.

Costs of sedation, which range from about $50 for nitrous oxide to $350 for IV drugs, are rarely covered by insurance. But some dentists throw it in for free if a patient is having extensive work. Anxious patients often need considerable dental repairs, particularly if they’ve been fugitives from dentistry for years, and many opt to have it all done at once while they are under sedation.

Minimizing Pain

New techniques and tools have made many aspects of dentistry less off-putting than they used to be.

Some dentists and hygienists offer lidocaine spray, gel or patches to numb patients’ teeth and gums even for routine cleanings. Many also wear magnifying loupes that allow them to give patients more personal space. “We can stand about 18 inches away now, rather than six or 12 inches,” says Dr. Hershkowitz.

Electric drills are quieter than older models that were driven by compressed air. In some cases, ultra-quiet lasers can be used instead of drills, but they have many limitations and don’t eliminate the need for anesthesia.

Devices that emit low-dose electrical pulses to block pain pathways right through the skin can be used in place of anesthesia for some procedures.

Unfortunately for the needle phobic, much dental work still requires an injection of local anesthetic—but there, too, there are innovations. For one thing, dental needles used to be sterilized and re-used, getting blunter and more painful to inject each time. Now, needles are used only once.

Numbing gel can also minimize the pain of the stick, but what hurts most about dental injections is the pressure of 1.7 milliliters of fluid pushing into dense tissue. One computerized device called The Wand controls the flow, volume and pressure of the injection and looks more like a pen than a needle. Dr. Kivowitz says that manually delivering an injection very slowly can minimize pain just as well. “Do they ever love it? No,” he says. “But if they understand what you’re doing, it helps a lot.”

He also notes that many anesthetics contain adrenaline, which makes them last longer but can send a patient’s heart racing and trigger panic attacks. It pays to warn patients of the possibility in advance, he says: “Any unexpected thing that happens in the chair just adds to the phobia.”

Maximizing Distractions

Taking a cue from pediatric practices, some dentists offer an array of entertainment options to keep patients’ minds off the drilling and filling, from flat-screen TVs to headphones to virtual-reality goggles for watching 3-D movies.

Some also boast spa-like comforts, such as massaging chairs, warm neck rolls, paraffin wax treatments for hands and reflexology, the traditional Chinese foot massage.

“Mondays and Wednesdays are ‘spa-days.’ We’re very busy then,” says dentist Eda Ellis at Central Park Dental Spa in New York, which also has a waterfall and aromatherapy candles in the waiting room. “Patients love it. THey say, ‘Wait, it’s over so fast?’ ” she says.

What can patients do themselves to alleviate their anxiety? Bring your own distractions—a riveting book, a music player full of transporting tunes or favorite movies if your dentist is equipped to play them.

“Some of my patients have done yoga and they are somewhere else in their minds while I’m working,” says Dr. Hershkowitz who has a private practice in Stony Brook, N.Y.

Behavioral psychotherapists can teach ways to overcome anxiety. Some people find that hypnosis helps them relax, and some hypnotherapists can provide sessions by phone before dental visits.

Don’t try to self-medicate. Drinking alcohol before a dental visit is an especially bad idea. An over-the-counter pain reliever may take the edge off pain, but some forms increase bleeding. Be sure to tell the dentist about any medications you are taking.

Tell the dentist and the staff about your fears. And shop around until you find a practice that is empathetic.

In the meantime, take very good care of your teeth and gums. The healthier they are, the more pleasant every dental visit will be.

—Take a video visit to a New York dental spa, at WSJ.com/Health.

Write to Melinda Beck at HealthJournal@wsj.com

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Patient anxiety reduced with proper music

February 1st, 2011 · Music and Relaxation, Music and Surgery, Music Healing, Music in the Hospital, Music Medicine, Music Research, Surgery with Music

Anxiety reduction through music

Patient anxiety can be reduced with the right music

Patient anxiety can be debilitating before surgery of any kind.  We’ve known for a long time that listening to calm, comforting, soothing music before surgery could do the same thing as the drugs…and without the risk of adverse reactions.   Overly and unnecessarily sedating the patient should be avoided.  Today another study appeared also documenting this!

Biol Res Nurs. 2011 Jan 28. [Epub ahead of print]

Evidence That Music Listening Reduces Preoperative Patients’ Anxiety.
Lee KC, Chao YH, Yiin JJ, Hsieh HY, Dai WJ, Chao YF.

Abstract
Background: Patients often exhibit preoperative fear and anxiety that may influence the process of induction and recovery from anesthesia. Music is thought to be an alternative to medication for relief of fear and anxiety. Objectives: The purpose of the present study was to explore the feasibility of using heart rate (HR) variability (HRV) for evaluating the efficacy of music listening to relieve the patients’ anxiety during their stay in the operation room waiting area and to compare the HRV measures with subjective Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) scores. Methods: In total, 140 patients were randomly assigned to the experimental (n = 64) or control group (n = 76). The intervention consisted of a 10-min period of exposure to relaxing music delivered through headphones. Anxiety levels were measured by VAS (a 10-point scale) and 5 min of HRV monitoring before and after the music intervention. Results: The music group demonstrated significant reductions in VAS scores, mean HR, low-frequency HRV, and low- to high-frequency ratio and an increase in high-frequency HRV, while patients in the control group showed no changes. The subjective results of patients’ VAS anxiety scores were consistent with the objective results of HRV parameters. Conclusions: Listening to music can significantly lower the anxiety levels of patients before surgery. The frequency-domain parameters of HRV can be indicators for monitoring the change in anxiety level of preoperative patients.

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Here’s your brain on jazz!

February 1st, 2011 · Music and the Brain, Music and the Mind-Body, Music in the News!

Have you ever wondered about your brain on jazz?  Jazz is said to be the only true American musical genre.  Even within jazz, there are now many sub-genres.  The performer is actually a neuroscientist and had the ability to have a little keyboard created.  He took it into an MRI machine to show the difference between the brain processing pre-composed music and the brain processing improvised music. What do you prefer?

All of the fascinating music and brain research being done today can be found not only on medical and research sites, but also on www.YouTube.com and many more.

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