THURSDAY, Sept. 29 (HealthDay News) -- Singing helps some stroke
patients suffering from non-fluent aphasia -- severe difficulties
with speech -- re-learn how to speak, according to a new study.
Researchers in Germany pointed out, however, it's the rhythm and
formulaic phrases associated with singing -- not the melodies --
that seem to make the difference.
The lyrics and phrases the patients were most familiar with had
the biggest impact on the their articulation -- even when they were
just spoken and not sung, the investigators found. They concluded
that the findings could lead to the development of new therapies
for speech disorders.
Speaking difficulties are common among people who suffer strokes
that damage speech areas in the brain's left hemisphere. But the
right side of the brain, which supports important functions of
singing, often remains intact in these patients. Previous research
suggested singing would stimulate areas in the right hemisphere
that would take on the speech functions of the damaged areas.
To explore this idea further, the researchers asked 17 stroke
patients with non-fluent aphasia to sing or recite several thousand
syllables with rhythmic or arrhythmic accompaniment. The phrases
selected were similar but very different in how familiar they were
to the patients and how formulaic they were.
The study authors found that singing the phrases did not produce
better results than speaking them rhythmically.
"The key element in our patients was, in fact, not the melody but the rhythm," Benjamin Stahl, researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences in Leipzig, said in an institute news release. "The positive effect was greatest in patients where deeper brain areas, known as the basal ganglia, were affected. These areas are known to be crucial for rhythmic processing."
The researchers pointed out that familiar song lyrics and
formulaic phrases were the easiest for the patients to articulate.
The reason for this, they suggested, is that these words may
involve other brain mechanisms than spontaneous speech, including
those involved in long-term memory.
More research is needed to determine how rhythmic and formulaic
speech can be used in rehabilitative therapies, the study authors
noted. "Even small gains in the ability to speak can mean a lot to
aphasics, who sometimes have been unable to communicate easily for
years," added Stahl.
More information
The U.S. National Library of Medicine has more about
communicating with someone with aphasia.