Music Therapy and Disorders of Consciousness

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      rjordanmiller
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      (2014). Music Therapy and Disorders of Consciousness: Providing Clinical Data for Differential Diagnosis between Vegetative State and Minimally Conscious State from Music-Centered Music Therapy and Neuroscience Perspectives. Music Therapy Perspectives, 32(1), 47-55.
      Authors:
      Lichtensztejn, M., Macchi, P., & Lischinsky, A.
      Abstract:
      A disorder of consciousness resulting from a brain injury can cause the loss or reduction of a wide spectrum of functions and abilities. Music therapy can provide significant information for a differential diagnosis between a minimally conscious state and a vegetative state in an interdisciplinary assessment. Through a specific approach and personalized interventions, the music therapist can facilitate a patient’s purposeful responses. There is a diverse body of research on the links between music and brain function. The processing of musical elements and structures is considered a highly demanding task for the brain, as multiple brain functions occur simultaneously in a highly organized and coordinated process. The purpose of this article is to contribute to the existing literature on differential diagnosis between vegetative state and minimally conscious state through a case report and analysis of music therapy interventions based on clinical improvisation. The article aims to explore how music may be employed as part of a comprehensive, multimodal approach to differential diagnosis and how musical interventions may provide data to determine the potential for rehabilitation of patients with disorders of consciousness.
      Weblinks:
      https://libproxy.wlu.ca/login?url=http://search.proquest.com.libproxy.wlu.ca/docview/1627872305?accountid=15090
      doi:10.1093/mtp/miu001

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