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Music Modulates Autonomic Nervous System Activity in Human Fetuses

CONTEXT: Fetal Autonomic Nervous sysTem Evaluation (FANTE) is a non-invasive tool that evaluates the autonomic nervous system activity in a fetus. Autonomic nervous system maturation and development during prenatal life are pivotal for the survival and neuropsychiatric development of the baby. OBJEC...

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Autores principales: Massimello, Francesca, Billeci, Lucia, Canu, Alessio, Montt-Guevara, Maria Magdalena, Impastato, Gaia, Varanini, Maurizio, Giannini, Andrea, Simoncini, Tommaso, Mannella, Paolo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9046697/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35492323
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2022.857591
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author Massimello, Francesca
Billeci, Lucia
Canu, Alessio
Montt-Guevara, Maria Magdalena
Impastato, Gaia
Varanini, Maurizio
Giannini, Andrea
Simoncini, Tommaso
Mannella, Paolo
author_facet Massimello, Francesca
Billeci, Lucia
Canu, Alessio
Montt-Guevara, Maria Magdalena
Impastato, Gaia
Varanini, Maurizio
Giannini, Andrea
Simoncini, Tommaso
Mannella, Paolo
author_sort Massimello, Francesca
collection PubMed
description CONTEXT: Fetal Autonomic Nervous sysTem Evaluation (FANTE) is a non-invasive tool that evaluates the autonomic nervous system activity in a fetus. Autonomic nervous system maturation and development during prenatal life are pivotal for the survival and neuropsychiatric development of the baby. OBJECTIVE: Aim of the study is to evaluate the effect of music stimulation on fetal heart rate and specific parameters linked to ANS activity, in particular fetal heart rate variability. METHODS: Thirty-two women between the 32nd and 38th week with a singleton uncomplicated pregnancy were recruited. All FANTE data collections were acquired using a 10-derivation electrocardiograph placed on the maternal abdomen. In each session (5 min basal, 10 min with music stimulus, and 5 min post-stimulus), FANTE was registered. The music stimulus was “Clair de lune” Debussy, played through headphones on the mother’s abdomen (CTR: 31927). RESULTS: Music does not change the mean value of fetal heart rate. However, indices of total fetal heart rate variability statistically increase (RRsd p = 0.037, ANNsd p = 0.039, SD2 p = 0.019) during music stimulation in comparison to the basal phase. Heart rate variability increase depends mainly on the activation of parasympathetic branches (CVI p = 0.013), meanwhile, no significant changes from basal to stimulation phase were observed for indices of sympathetic activity. All the parameters of heart rate variability and parasympathetic activity remained activated in the post-stimulus phase compared to the stimulus phase. In the post-stimulus phase, sympathetic activity resulted in a significant reduction (LFn p = 0.037). CONCLUSION: Music can influence the basal activity of the fetal autonomic nervous system, enhancing heart rate variability, without changing fetal heart rate mean value. Music is enabled to induce a relaxation state in a near-to-term fetus, mediated by parasympathetic activation and by a parallel sympathetic inhibition.
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spelling pubmed-90466972022-04-29 Music Modulates Autonomic Nervous System Activity in Human Fetuses Massimello, Francesca Billeci, Lucia Canu, Alessio Montt-Guevara, Maria Magdalena Impastato, Gaia Varanini, Maurizio Giannini, Andrea Simoncini, Tommaso Mannella, Paolo Front Med (Lausanne) Medicine CONTEXT: Fetal Autonomic Nervous sysTem Evaluation (FANTE) is a non-invasive tool that evaluates the autonomic nervous system activity in a fetus. Autonomic nervous system maturation and development during prenatal life are pivotal for the survival and neuropsychiatric development of the baby. OBJECTIVE: Aim of the study is to evaluate the effect of music stimulation on fetal heart rate and specific parameters linked to ANS activity, in particular fetal heart rate variability. METHODS: Thirty-two women between the 32nd and 38th week with a singleton uncomplicated pregnancy were recruited. All FANTE data collections were acquired using a 10-derivation electrocardiograph placed on the maternal abdomen. In each session (5 min basal, 10 min with music stimulus, and 5 min post-stimulus), FANTE was registered. The music stimulus was “Clair de lune” Debussy, played through headphones on the mother’s abdomen (CTR: 31927). RESULTS: Music does not change the mean value of fetal heart rate. However, indices of total fetal heart rate variability statistically increase (RRsd p = 0.037, ANNsd p = 0.039, SD2 p = 0.019) during music stimulation in comparison to the basal phase. Heart rate variability increase depends mainly on the activation of parasympathetic branches (CVI p = 0.013), meanwhile, no significant changes from basal to stimulation phase were observed for indices of sympathetic activity. All the parameters of heart rate variability and parasympathetic activity remained activated in the post-stimulus phase compared to the stimulus phase. In the post-stimulus phase, sympathetic activity resulted in a significant reduction (LFn p = 0.037). CONCLUSION: Music can influence the basal activity of the fetal autonomic nervous system, enhancing heart rate variability, without changing fetal heart rate mean value. Music is enabled to induce a relaxation state in a near-to-term fetus, mediated by parasympathetic activation and by a parallel sympathetic inhibition. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-04-14 /pmc/articles/PMC9046697/ /pubmed/35492323 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2022.857591 Text en Copyright © 2022 Massimello, Billeci, Canu, Montt-Guevara, Impastato, Varanini, Giannini, Simoncini and Mannella. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Medicine
Massimello, Francesca
Billeci, Lucia
Canu, Alessio
Montt-Guevara, Maria Magdalena
Impastato, Gaia
Varanini, Maurizio
Giannini, Andrea
Simoncini, Tommaso
Mannella, Paolo
Music Modulates Autonomic Nervous System Activity in Human Fetuses
title Music Modulates Autonomic Nervous System Activity in Human Fetuses
title_full Music Modulates Autonomic Nervous System Activity in Human Fetuses
title_fullStr Music Modulates Autonomic Nervous System Activity in Human Fetuses
title_full_unstemmed Music Modulates Autonomic Nervous System Activity in Human Fetuses
title_short Music Modulates Autonomic Nervous System Activity in Human Fetuses
title_sort music modulates autonomic nervous system activity in human fetuses
topic Medicine
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9046697/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35492323
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2022.857591
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