Abstract

Music intervention has been applied to improve symptoms of schizophrenic subjects as a complementary treatment in medicine. Although the psychiatric symptoms, especially for motivation and emotion, could be increased in schizophrenia, the underlying neural mechanisms remain poorly understood. We employed a longitudinal study to measure the alteration of striatum functional networks in schizophrenic subjects undergoing Mozart music listening using resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Forty-five schizophrenic inpatients were recruited and randomly assigned to two groups. Under the standard care with antipsychotic medication, one group received music intervention for 1 month and the other group is set as control. Both schizophrenic groups were compared to healthy subjects. Resting-state fMRI was acquired from schizophrenic subjects at baseline and after one-month music intervention and from healthy subjects at baseline. Striatum network was assessed through seed-based static and dynamic functional connectivity (FC) analyses. After music intervention, increased static FC was observed between pallidum and ventral hippocampus in schizophrenic subjects. Increased dynamic FCs were also found between pallidus and subregions of default mode network (DMN), including cerebellum crus and posterior cingulate cortex. Moreover, static pallidus-hippocampus FC increment was positively correlated with the improvement of negative symptoms in schizophrenic subjects. Together, these findings provided evidence that music intervention might have an effect on the FC of the striatum-DMN circuit and might be related to the remission of symptoms of schizophrenia.

Highlights

  • Schizophrenia is a complex psychiatric illness, which is always characterized by positive and negative symptoms and cognitive impairments [1], affecting about one percentage of the population worldwide [2]

  • Excellent research has revealed that abnormality in dopamine-mediated striatum system may be related to multiple deficient reward processing, which contributes to the negative symptoms of schizophrenic subjects [12]. e striatum is differentiated into caudate, putamen, and nucleus accumbens [13]. ese subregions of striatum receive and send back information with the cortex

  • Increased static functional connectivity (FC) was observed in MTSZ after music intervention compared to the baseline, while there was no change in UMTSZ (Figure 3(b) and Table 4)

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Summary

Introduction

Schizophrenia is a complex psychiatric illness, which is always characterized by positive and negative symptoms and cognitive impairments [1], affecting about one percentage of the population worldwide [2]. Several studies indicated that music intervention could improve schizophrenic subjects’ psychiatric symptoms [3] Understanding this neurophysiological mechanism could gain a better understanding of complementary therapy and might improve further therapies on schizophrenia. Based on the findings from previous neuroimage studies, we hypothesized that the music intervention would positively improve the symptoms of schizophrenic subjects through FC changes between the regions of striatum and cortical cortex. We posit that these reflected FC changes are an important driving factor in pathological functional changes through music intervention on schizophrenia

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