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https://doi.org/10.18632/aging.202374
Title: | Effects of choral singing versus health education on cognitive decline and aging: a randomized controlled trial | Authors: | Feng, Lei Romero-Garcia, Rafael Suckling, John Tan, Jasmine Larbi, Anis Cheah, Irwin Wong, Glenn Tsakok, Maurine Lanskey, Bernard Lim, Darius Li, Jialiang Yang, Joanna Goh, Benjamin Teck, Tristan Gwee Chen Ho, Allan Wang, Xiu Yu, Jin-Tai Zhang, Can Tan, Crystal Chua, Michelle Li, Junhua Totman, John J Wong, Caroline Loh, Marie Foo, Roger Tan, Chay Hoon Goh, Lee Gan Mahendran, Rathi Kennedy, Brian K Kua, Ee-Heok |
Keywords: | Science & Technology Life Sciences & Biomedicine Cell Biology Geriatrics & Gerontology choral singing health education cognitive decline biological markers randomized controlled trial T-LYMPHOCYTE SUBPOPULATIONS CHINESE OLDER-ADULTS OXIDATIVE DAMAGE DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS ALZHEIMERS-DISEASE MENTAL-HEALTH DEMENTIA BRAIN PSYCHONEUROIMMUNOLOGY INTERVENTION |
Issue Date: | 31-Dec-2020 | Publisher: | IMPACT JOURNALS LLC | Citation: | Feng, Lei, Romero-Garcia, Rafael, Suckling, John, Tan, Jasmine, Larbi, Anis, Cheah, Irwin, Wong, Glenn, Tsakok, Maurine, Lanskey, Bernard, Lim, Darius, Li, Jialiang, Yang, Joanna, Goh, Benjamin, Teck, Tristan Gwee Chen, Ho, Allan, Wang, Xiu, Yu, Jin-Tai, Zhang, Can, Tan, Crystal, Chua, Michelle, Li, Junhua, Totman, John J, Wong, Caroline, Loh, Marie, Foo, Roger, Tan, Chay Hoon, Goh, Lee Gan, Mahendran, Rathi, Kennedy, Brian K, Kua, Ee-Heok (2020-12-31). Effects of choral singing versus health education on cognitive decline and aging: a randomized controlled trial. AGING-US 12 (24) : 24798-24816. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.18632/aging.202374 | Abstract: | We conducted a randomized controlled trial to examine choral singing's effect on cognitive decline in aging. Older Singaporeans who were at high risk of future dementia were recruited: 47 were assigned to choral singing intervention (CSI) and 46 were assigned to health education program (HEP). Participants attended weekly one-hour choral singing or weekly one-hour health education for two years. Change in cognitive function was measured by a composite cognitive test score (CCTS) derived from raw scores of neuropsychological tests; biomarkers included brain magnetic resonance imaging, oxidative damage and immunosenescence. The average age of the participants were 70 years and 73/93 (78.5%) were female. The change of CCTS from baseline to 24 months was 0.05 among participants in the CSI group and -0.1 among participants in the HEP group. The between-group difference (0.15, p=0.042) became smaller (0.12, p=0.09) after adjusting for baseline CCTS. No between-group differences on biomarkers were observed. Our data support the role of choral singing in improving cognitive health in aging. The beneficial effect is at least comparable than that of health education in preventing cognitive decline in a community of elderly people. Biological mechanisms underlying the observed efficacy should be further studied | Source Title: | AGING-US | URI: | https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/218883 | ISSN: | 19454589 | DOI: | 10.18632/aging.202374 |
Appears in Collections: | Staff Publications Elements |
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