Does Music Impact
Epilepsy – For Bad Or For Good?
His name was Kung Tsu Chen. He
was a Chinese poet in 1847 when he described a rare but very real phenomenon now
known as “musicogenic epilepsy”. With musicogenic epilepsy, the individual
suffers from brain seizures that are triggered by music, and in his case a very
specific kind of music. You see, Kung Tsu Chen recorded that though he didn’t
know why, he would become sick when he would hear the sound of a street vendor’s
flute during the evening sun.
Researchers tell us that this form
of epilepsy can appear as a result of many kinds of music. In the case of our
Chinese poet the trigger was apparently flute melodies, but seizures can be
triggered by type of music, or type of instrument, the composer or even the
emotional content of the piece. As a matter of fact, in some cases just
thinking about the music, regardless of whether the individual is awake or not,
is enough to trigger an epileptic seizure.
Exactly how musicogenic episodes
are induced is unknown and unfortunately due to how few cases of musicogenic
epilepsy in the world the research monies have not been available to study this
question directly. It has been suggested, however, that the right temporal lobe
of the brain contains, within the right auditory cortex, a series of modules
that specialize in processing music. If this is so, the theory suggests, then
musicogenic epilepsy is evidence of a malfunction of this part of the brain.
Fortunately, that’s not the end of
the story. Music has also been found to have a profoundly positive effect on
individuals with epilepsy as well. One research study even found that when
epileptic patients are treated with music therapy as well as conventional
epileptic medicines as many as eighty percent of their patients had the
frequency of their epileptic seizures reduced by seventy five percent!
Likewise, eighty percent of epileptic patients experienced at least some
reduction in the intensity of their epileptic seizures.
The reason for this, it has been
suggested, may be found in the fact that the brain does not have any single
center for processing music. Instead, the areas of the brain that process music
are scattered widely across the brain. Thus, when the brain is subjected to
music that is highly structured, such as Mozart’s Sonata for Two Piano’s, the
brain process is actually aided. Unfortunately, the implication is that the
inverse is true as well, certain kinds of music could, in theory, make it more
difficult for a brain that is struggling to function in the first place if there
is a clash at that weak point.
So, does this mean that we avoid
music? Unless you have musicogenic epilepsy the answer is no. As a matter of
fact, studies have shown that patients with other kinds of epilepsy can actually
be benefited by listening to music! As a matter of fact, in one such study, the
researchers found that epileptic episodes were significantly reduced in more
than seventy-nine percent of the cases when Mozart’s Sonata for Two Piano’s was
being played in the room where the patient was located.
To my knowledge, music is not yet
used as a formal treatment for epilepsy, but the sheer fact that music has shown
a potential ability to be a treatment for epilepsy as well as its ability to
induce epileptic seizures would seem to indicate that music just might play a
more significant role in the human experience than we ever imagined.
Duane Shinn is the
author of over 500 music courses for adults including
"Pro Secrets:
Piano Playing Secrets Of The Pros”.
http://www.piano-playing-by-ear.com
He is
also the author of the popular free 101-week online e-mail newsletter titled
“Amazing Secrets Of Exciting Piano Chords & Sizzling Chord Progressions” at
www.playpiano.com
with over 61,400 current subscribers
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