Personalized Music May Improve Sleep And Well-Being
Source: Epilepsy & behavior : E&B
Summary
This study looked at whether personalized music played all night might help children with epilepsy. It included 19 children ages 5 to 17. Each child had overnight brain-wave and sleep testing before the music started, when it began, and again after three weeks. The researchers made a custom playlist for each child by using recordings of healthier brain activity and matching that pattern to music.
The researchers found that unusual brain-wave spikes linked to epilepsy dropped by about 28% on average. Sleep also improved: REM sleep increased, children had fewer awakenings, and sleep became more efficient. Melatonin levels went up during the music treatment. Parents and children also reported better quality of life, including less seizure worry, better energy, better emotional well-being, and fewer problems related to treatment side effects.
These results suggest that personalized music may be a helpful add-on approach for some children with epilepsy, especially because it was linked with better sleep and quality of life as well as fewer abnormal EEG spikes. But this study was small and did not include a comparison group, so it cannot prove that the music caused the improvements. Larger, randomized studies are needed to confirm the findings and rule out other possible reasons for the changes.
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