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Tune Your Life with Music

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Can Mozart Make you Smarter?

July 25th, 2009 · Music and the Brain

An expert addresses this very controversial question: “Can Mozart Make You Smarter?”

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Can Preemies Benefit from Music?

July 24th, 2009 · Music with Newborns and Preemies

Picture a mother softly crooning to her newborn.  Picture this throughout history because I believe that mothers have instinctively done this from the beginning of time.  Why?  Because it calms the infant and it also calms the mother!  What if the baby comes early?

No one plans for a preemie but all over the world, preemies come into the world and their little lives dangle precipitously between life and death for days and weeks.  Could lullabies help?  Absolutely!  Because we know that the fetal ear is functional by the second trimester, the unborn child associates the melodies that Mother sings with security and safety and respond in the NICU by calming down and stabilizing heart-rate, BP, and body temperature.

If you give birth to a preemie, please sing these lullabies, but you must start doing this as soon as possible after the first trimester.  Even if your baby is full-term, the benefits of singing to the baby are tremendous and powerful!  Music contributes to wellness and emotional stability.

Click here to get my best-selling lullaby CD or download!

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Music with Parkinson’s Disease: Powerful Intervention

July 21st, 2009 · Music Healing

The Magic of Music with Parkinson\’s Disease  This is one of the most amazing and impressive videos that I’ve seen in a long time! It demonstrates beautifully the power of music with Parkinson’s patients.

Parkinson’s has affected several dear friends of mine and it can be quite debilitating.  On the other hand, there are many effective treatments and interventions, ranging from pharmacotherapy to physical therapy and music therapy.  Because depression often accompanies Parkinson’s, many patients don’t avail themselves of all of these complementary therapies, or assume that they wouldn’t work for them.

If you are someone you know has been diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, please check out music therapy, especially.  The strong rhythmic pulse of many pieces of music and songs affects the brain of the Parkinson’s patient in a way that powerfully improves their gait, and ability to move around without stumbling and falling.  This video demonstrates the effect clearly.

Now I am offering to people diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease my specially programmed, wireless headphones, programmed with the specific type of music that Parkinson’s patients need! If you are interested, contact me immediately at chantdoc@healingmusicenterprises.com. More information will be coming soon! This is going to be big! Help yourself and your loved ones with Parkinsons NOW!

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Music is/as Medicine: doctors prescribe tunes!

July 19th, 2009 · Music and the Mind-Body

Music as medicine: Docs use tunes as treatment
Researchers explore how melodies can help regulate heart, boost hormones
By Bill Briggs
msnbc.com contributor
updated 2:44 p.m. ET, Mon., June 1, 2009
As Victor Fabry napped in his hospital bed, a quiet symphony filled his room. The steady pulse of a cardiac monitor marked the progress of his mending heart. Over that beat, the swaying strains of a Brazilian guitarist pumped nearly nonstop from a CD player on the shelf.

For nine days after his surgery at the Gagnon Cardiovascular Institute in Morristown, N.J., Fabry soaked up that tranquil, wordless strumming. And while he praised his surgeon, he raved about the musical score that accompanied his recovery.

His heart literally fell in rhythm with guitarist Tomaz Lima. The music became his medicine.

“Very restful, very soothing,” said Fabry, 68, now almost two years removed from the surgery. Immediately after his operation, a live harpist also played at his bedside. “The mind influences your recovery. Anything that quiets your anxiety is powerful.”

Listen carefully and you’ll hear the same refrain at a rising number of hospitals. From Massachusetts General to the Mayo Clinic, patients are hearing the first strains of a harmonious movement — the infusion and inclusion of music in the treatment of ailments, from brain disorders to cancer. This goes beyond the psychological smile favorite songs can induce.

Doctors are increasingly studying — and employing — the physiological dance music does with the body’s neurons and blood-carrying cells.

“We’re in the infancy,” said Dr. Ali Rezai, director of the Center for Neurological Restoration at Ohio’s Cleveland Clinic. During a surgery called deep brain stimulation — performed while patients with Parkinson’s disease are awake — Rezai and his team play classical compositions and measure the brain’s response to those notes. “We know music can calm, influence creativity, can energize. That’s great. But music’s role in recovering from disease is being ever more appreciated.”

Using music to help the ill has been employed for thousands of years, even though modern medicine is just starting to understand how it works, said Dr. Claudius Conrad, a senior surgical resident at Harvard Medical School and, himself, a gifted pianist. He is set to launch the first study of music’s impact on the sleep cycles of acute-care patients.

“Research has already shown that if you play a piece — like Mozart — at a certain slow beat, the listener will adapt their heart beat to the beat of the music.”

From musical notes to hormone stimulation
The anatomical route musical notes take through the body is indeed a busy highway celebrated in many songs, from head to heart. Based on interviews with neurologists and cardiologists, the journey from an instrument string to your heart strings goes something like this:

Sound waves travel through the air into the ears and buzz the eardrums and bones in the middle ears. To decode the vibration, your brain transforms that mechanical energy into electrical energy, sending the signal to its cerebral cortex — a hub for thought, perception and memory. Within that control tower, the auditory cortex forwards the message on to brain centers that direct emotion, arousal, anxiety, pleasure and creativity. And there’s another stop upstairs: that electrical cue hits the hypothalamus which controls heart rate and respiration, plus your stomach and skin nerves, explaining why a melody may give you butterflies or goose bumps. Of course, all this communication happens far faster than a single drum beat.

Before jetting through the blood stream, the signals are converted again — to hormones. At the University of Munich, Conrad was able to show that critically ill patients required fewer sedative drugs when they listened to one hour of Mozart piano sonatas. As expected, the patients’ blood pressures and heart rates eased with the music.

But what surprised Conrad is that the patients also showed a 50 percent spike in pituitary growth hormone, which is known to stimulate healing. Today, at Massachusetts General Hospital, Conrad asks his patients (or their families) in the surgical intensive care unit what music they’d like to hear; if neither is can provide an answer, he often plays Mozart.

Healing dose of Lady Gaga?
Classical is a common pick among doctors and therapists who use melody as a healing tool. The vibrations of stringed instruments in particular are said to mesh with the energy of the heart, small intestine, pericardium, thyroid and adrenal glands, according to a soon-to-be-published study by researchers at Gagnon Cardiovascular Institute in New Jersey. But what about rock or hip hop? Country or house? Does the body react as positively to Lady GaGa as it does Bach? Do you heal faster with Beethoven or a dose of Miley Cyrus?

“I recommend listening to joyful music as part of an overall prescription for maintaining good heart health,” said Dr. Michael Miller, director of the center for preventive cardiology at the University of Maryland Medical Center.

Joyful? “Music that brings out a natural high in order to maximize endorphin release,” explained Miller, whose research (presented last November to the American Heart Association) showed that hearing your favorite song can cause tissue in your blood vessels to dilate, increasing blood flow.

Miller examined 10 healthy, non-smoking volunteers before and after they grooved to tunes of their choice and measured a 26 percent jump in the diameter of their upper arm blood vessels. (Conversely, after wincing through music they hated, the volunteers’ blood vessels narrowed by six percent.)

Prescription for helping brain injuries heal?
At Cleveland Clinic, Rezai and other neurosurgeons collaborate with The Cleveland Orchestra to compose classical pieces to play for patients during brain operations. Rezai then gauges how individual neurons fire when the head hears those foreign chords and cadences, and he compares that reaction to how the neurons behave when familiar songs fill the operating room. Hair-sized sensors placed in the brain translate those signals to an amplifier. Study results are expected in three to six months.

The firing of a neuron “may sound like static to some, but it’s music to my ears,” said Rezai. Patients tell him when the music soothes them, and Rezai can hear the corresponding changes in a single neuron. The research, he said, can serve as a keystone for other studies of music’s potential in treating people with traumatic brain injuries, stroke, multiple sclerosis and severe depression.

But some of the oldest healing music may still be the most potent. Frescos painted around 4,000 B.C. depict harp-playing priests. Today, live harpists can be heard at Gagnon, at the University of Rochester Medical Center and at least five other hospitals.

“This gentle but powerful instrument goes to the deepest places of the body that need to be healed,” said Tami Briggs, a pioneer in “harp therapy” who has played at the bedsides of hundreds of patients, including many at the Mayo Clinic. “I’m not a nurse, but I know enough about the monitors, and what I see is blood pressure usually goes down (when I play), oxygenation rates go up. That’s connected to that more peaceful place, where they are taking deeper breaths.”

The harp is the only instrument that has 20 to 50 strings and is open, unlike, say, a violin. When a harpist strikes a chord, she also opens vibrations in strings just above and below the few she plucks. Those vibes, Briggs said, are absorbed by the body.

“When I play, it’s as subtle as watching somebody relax in the littlest ways,” Briggs said. “They fall deeper into their bed.”

© 2009 msnbc.com.
URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/30990170/

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World’s Oldest Musical Instrument Discovered

July 17th, 2009 · Announcements

Archaeologists in Germany have uncovered the world’s oldest known musical instrument – a flute made from a vulture bone which is believed to be 35,000 years old.

The ancient flute was found in the Hohle Fels cave in southern Germany by a team led by University of Tuebingen archaeologist Nicholas Conard.

Conard said the find proved that music was important to early modern humans and showed how the creation of music has a historic role in our culture.

“It’s very clear that music played an important role in these people’s lives,” he says.

“There were certainly, you know, the Michelangelos back then, who were the highly talented people for carving masterpieces,” he said. “But the Michelangelos also had to hunt and butcher and chip stones and do all sorts of things.”

Edward Hagen, an anthropologist at Washington State University Vancouver who was not involved in the research, told the Boston Globe the find was a link to our past.

“Emotionally, you can look at this thing and recognise yourself; you can see this is a flute, you can imagine yourself playing it, you can imagine yourself making it,” he said. “It’s essentially a connection between us and people who lived 35,000 years ago.”

“To see this early in the archaeological record suggests it might be a fundamental aspect of human nature. … It does at least hint that music lies close to our foundation of common humanity,” he added.

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Music and the Brain After Surgery

July 15th, 2009 · Music and Surgery, Music Healing

http://the-brain-and-music.blogspot.com/2009/07/music-releases-endorphins-in-brain.html

Everyone knows that music makes them feel better, but apparently, music immediately after surgery is even more powerful than previously known. today I came across this article: By Denise DadorLOS ANGELES (KABC) — A local hospital takes the healing properties of music right to the patients.
She’s in the hospital, but Carol Starks feels she’s being transported to another place.
“A little music goes a long way and it soothes the soul,” said Starks.
Bariatric surgeon and musician, Dr. Peter Crookes, heals for a living but says modern medicine can only bring people so far. The rest depends on the patient and he believes music helps.
“It may cause the release of endorphins and that is one of the postulate mechanisms. Anything that will open the patient’s mind to other dimensions of life helps them to cope with it,” said Dr. Crookes.
Musician Jane Kim founded the USC volunteer program. She saw music’s medical effects firsthand when her father was a patient.
“At the time that he was in the hospital he found it very beneficial listening to music. And seeing the positive effects it had on him I wanted to share that with others,” said Kim.
Once a month, some patients get treated to an impromptu concert.
“It was just great. It just made me feel very good and it made me feel very special,” said patient Ceci Montalvo.
We all enjoy hearing music, but if it’s just in the background and you’re just passively listening, experts say it’s not going to work on your body and mind. To truly experience music you have to actively listen to it.
“If you attend to music it channels the brain and trains certain actions in the brain which I think are beneficial,” said Dr. Crookes.
Studies show music can help people recovering from pain and reduce the need for post-op medications.
Another study reveals music can reduce the anxiety of patients just before surgery. Patients say music’s ability to alter their mood can be quite beneficial.
“It makes happiness. It doesn’t matter how sad you are or how hurt you are, music can bring it out,” said Starks.
If you are interested in being a volunteer for the Music Heals program send an e-mail to musichealsgroup@gmail.com.

Click here for more headlines from ABC7 Eyewitness News

(Copyright ©2009 KABC-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.)

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Music Can Heal Your Life!

July 14th, 2009 · Music and Cancer

Could music make your life better?

I know that all of you know that I am also a musicologist and music healer. Tonight as I listened to “America’s Got Talent” I was so touched by a woman who sang her heart out and the judges loved her. When asked how she felt after this outstanding performance, she said she felt as though it were the second miracle in her life. “What was the first?” Sharon asked her. The dear lady then revealed that she was a cancer survivor for the last five years! Then Piers Morgan asked her if she believes that singing contributed to her healing. She replied that there was no doubt about that. Piers said” your singing has healed not only YOU but also everyone that hears you!”

What music is healing to you? What music lifts you up and gives you strength and hope? Find that music and listen to it often! It’s free!!

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Music and Surgery Lectures available for you and your group

July 12th, 2009 · Music and Surgery, Music Keynotes and Breakouts

The word about music during surgery is getting out! I did a lecture this past Friday night at a large Presbyterian Church here in Louisville and then appeared on a widely-broadcast radio show here earlier this evening! Once people begin to understand what a huge benefit music during surgery is, the more they not only use it themselves for any medical procedure but the more they begin to tell their friends, family, and physicians. My goal is to have the wireless, pre-programmed headphones in every hospital, every doctor’s office and in many homes as well. If you want to know more, go now to www.surgicalheadphones.com. As always, send me your questions, your comments, and your stories of music’s healing power.

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