4.5 Article

Post-stroke enriched auditory environment induces structural connectome plasticity: secondary analysis from a randomized controlled trial

Journal

BRAIN IMAGING AND BEHAVIOR
Volume 16, Issue 4, Pages 1813-1822

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11682-022-00661-6

Keywords

Music; Environmental enrichment; Stroke; Rehabilitation; Structural connectivity

Categories

Funding

  1. University of Helsinki
  2. Helsinki University Central Hospital
  3. European Research Council [803466]
  4. Academy of Finland [257077, 277693, 299044]
  5. Tyks Research Funding [13944]
  6. Finnish Brain Research and Rehabilitation Foundation
  7. Finnish Brain Foundation
  8. Finnish Cultural Foundation [191230]
  9. Orion Research Foundation sr
  10. Signe and Ane Gyllenberg Foundation
  11. Academy of Finland (AKA) [257077, 277693, 277693] Funding Source: Academy of Finland (AKA)
  12. European Research Council (ERC) [803466] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Post-stroke neuroplasticity and cognitive recovery can be enhanced by multimodal stimulation via environmental enrichment. Recent studies have shown that listening to music, especially music with singing, during the subacute post-stroke stage improves cognitive outcomes and enhances language recovery. However, little is known about the effects of enriched sound environment on the structural connectome of the recovering post-stroke brain. This study demonstrates that both vocal and instrumental music listening interventions induce widespread structural connectivity changes in the post-stroke brain, creating a favorable environment for functional restoration.
Post-stroke neuroplasticity and cognitive recovery can be enhanced by multimodal stimulation via environmental enrichment. In this vein, recent studies have shown that enriched sound environment (i.e., listening to music) during the subacute post-stroke stage improves cognitive outcomes compared to standard care. The beneficial effects of post-stroke music listening are further pronounced when listening to music containing singing, which enhances language recovery coupled with structural and functional connectivity changes within the language network. However, outside the language network, virtually nothing is known about the effects of enriched sound environment on the structural connectome of the recovering post-stroke brain. Here, we report secondary outcomes from a single-blind randomized controlled trial (NCT01749709) in patients with ischaemic or haemorrhagic stroke (N = 38) who were randomly assigned to listen to vocal music, instrumental music, or audiobooks during the first 3 post-stroke months. Utilizing the longitudinal diffusion-weighted MRI data of the trial, the present study aimed to determine whether the music listening interventions induce changes on structural white matter connectome compared to the control audiobook intervention. Both vocal and instrumental music groups increased quantitative anisotropy longitudinally in multiple left dorsal and ventral tracts as well as in the corpus callosum, and also in the right hemisphere compared to the audiobook group. Audiobook group did not show increased structural connectivity changes compared to both vocal and instrumental music groups. This study shows that listening to music, either vocal or instrumental promotes wide-spread structural connectivity changes in the post-stroke brain, providing a fertile ground for functional restoration.

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