Next Article in Journal
Young Adults with a Parent with Dementia Show Early Abnormalities in Brain Activity and Brain Volume in the Hippocampus: A Matched Case-Control Study
Next Article in Special Issue
The Feasibility and Acceptability of Neurologic Music Therapy in Subacute Neurorehabilitation and Effects on Patient Mood
Previous Article in Journal
The Detection of Face-like Stimuli at the Edge of the Infant Visual Field
Previous Article in Special Issue
The Impact of Music on Stress Biomarkers: Protocol of a Substudy of the Cluster-Randomized Controlled Trial Music Interventions for Dementia and Depression in ELderly Care (MIDDEL)
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Study Protocol

Home-Based Music Therapy to Support Bulbar and Respiratory Functions of Persons with Early and Mid-Stage Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis—Protocol and Results from a Feasibility Study

1
ALSMusicTherapy.Org, 115419 Moscow, Russia
2
Bujanov Moscow City Clinical Hospital, 115419 Moscow, Russia
3
Institute of Higher Nervous Activity and Neurophysiology, 115419 Moscow, Russia
4
Moscow Research and Clinical Center for Neuropsychiatry, 115419 Moscow, Russia
5
Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, MGH Institute of Health Professions, Boston, MA 02129-4557, USA
6
Clinical and Research Institute of Emergency Pediatric Surgery and Trauma, 119180 Moscow, Russia
7
Faculty of Health, Education, Medicine & Social Care, School of Medicine, Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge CM1 1SQ, UK
8
Music, Health and the Brain, Cambridge Institute for Music Therapy Research, Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge CM1 1SQ, UK
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Brain Sci. 2022, 12(4), 494; https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci12040494
Submission received: 10 March 2022 / Revised: 1 April 2022 / Accepted: 6 April 2022 / Published: 13 April 2022

Abstract

:
Respiratory failure, malnutrition, aspiration pneumonia, and dehydration are the precursors to mortality in ALS. Loss of natural communication is considered one of the worst aspects of ALS. This first study to test the feasibility of a music therapy protocol for bulbar and respiratory rehabilitation in ALS employs a mixed-methods case study series design with repeated measures. Newly diagnosed patients meeting the inclusion criteria were invited to participate, until the desired sample size (n = 8) was achieved. The protocol was delivered to participants in their homes twice weekly for six weeks. Individualised exercise sets for independent practice were provided. Feasibility data (recruitment, retention, adherence, tolerability, self-motivation and personal impressions) were collected. Bulbar and respiratory changes were objectively measured. Results. A high recruitment rate (100%), a high retention rate (87.5%) and high mean adherence to treatment (95.4%) provide evidence for the feasibility of the study protocol. The treatment was well tolerated. Mean adherence to the suggested independent exercise routine was 53%. The outcome measurements to evaluate the therapy-induced change in bulbar and respiratory functions were defined. Findings suggest that the protocol is safe to use in early- and mid-stage ALS and that music therapy was beneficial for the participants’ bulbar and respiratory functions. Mean trends suggesting that these functions were sustained or improved during the treatment period were observed for most outcome parameters: Maximal Inspiratory Pressure, Maximal Expiratory Pressure, Peak Expiratory Flow, the Center for Neurologic Study—Bulbar Function Scale speech and swallowing subscales, Maximum Phonation Time, Maximum Repetition Rate—Alternating, Maximum Repetition Rate—Sequential, Jitter, Shimmer, NHR, Speaking rate, Speech–pause ratio, Pause frequency, hypernasality level, Time-to-Laryngeal Vestibule Closure, Maximum Pharyngeal Constriction Area, Peak Position of the Hyoid Bone, Total Pharyngeal Residue C24area. Conclusion. The suggested design and protocol are feasible for a larger study, with some modifications, including aerodynamic measure of nasalance, abbreviated voice sampling and psychological screening.

1. Introduction

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a rapidly progressive fatal neurological disease, affecting motoneurons in the brain and spinal cord. According to a meta-analysis, the overall pooled incidence of ALS was 1.68 (95% confidence interval, CI 1.50–1.85) per 100,000 person-years [1], and prevalence is increasing [2]. Clinical presentation is phenotypically heterogeneous and depends on the site of onset. Limb onset is the most common and the first symptoms include compromised gait and manual dexterity. Bulbar-onset ALS patients first develop symptoms in the head and neck region, experiencing slurred speech or difficulty swallowing. There are also rare truncal–abdominal (axial) and respiratory onsets. At least 90% of ALS cases are considered sporadic, which means the disease seems to occur with no family history of the disease [3]. The pathophysiology mechanisms behind ALS are not clear and may include oxidative stress, protein misfolding and aggregation, skeletal muscle dysfunction, glutamate excitotoxicity, mitochondrial dysfunction, neuroinflammation, RNA processing disruption, and apoptosis [4].

1.1. Bulbar and Respiratory Involvement in ALS

A total of 93% of persons with ALS (pwALS) experience speech impairments and 85% present with swallowing dysfunction at some point during disease progression [5]. Loss of natural communication is regarded by patients as one of the worst aspects of the disease [6]. Patients with dysphagia report social isolation, fear and decreased mental health [7]. Dysphagia and malnutrition contribute to 25.9% of ALS mortality and increase the risk of death by 7.7 fold [8,9,10]. Aspiration pneumonia and dehydration have also been cited among the leading factors contributing to mortality in ALS [11,12]. Emotional lability (pseudobulbar affect), a symptom frequently correlated with bulbar involvement in ALS, may also be confusing and disruptive, especially when communicating with those who are not aware of the nature of the problem [13]. Respiratory dysfunction, manifested as dyspnoea on exertion, orthopnoea, and early morning headaches with fatigue [14], is common in ALS. Weakening of respiratory function and adherence to NIV are the leading causes of anxiety of pwALS [15,16], and respiratory failure has been cited as the leading cause of death [17].

1.2. Cognitive, Behavioural and Psychological Symptoms in ALS

Whilst in the past ALS was considered distinctly a disorder of the motor system, current evidence suggests that some cognitive impairment (ALSci) or behavioural impairment (ALSbi) occurs in up to 50% of cases, and co-morbid dementia (ALS-FTD) occurs in approximately 14% of patients with a new diagnosis of ALS [18]. The notion that “pure” ALS and “pure” frontotemporal dementia (FTD) may present two extremes of one disease continuum [19] is reinforced by identification of transactive response DNA-binding protein 43 (TDP-43) as a major pathological substrate underlying both diseases [20]. ALSci and ALS-FTD patients are more severely impaired in executive function, attention, language and memory than cognitively intact ALS patients.
Depression is prevalent in ALS. It is associated with disease severity at initial assessment and has detrimental effects on survival and quality of life [21]. It is reported that high levels of anxiety are often present in persons with ALS during the diagnostic phase and the earlier period after the diagnosis [22]. Depression and anxiety are undertreated in ALS, and psychological and pharmacological interventions for their prevention and treatment are only minimally addressed in the literature [23].

1.3. Family Caregivers in ALS Care

Family caregivers play a key role in ALS care, providing care for 47 h per week on average [24] and actively participating in clinical decision making [25]. Nearly all treatment or rehabilitative activity intended for persons with ALS requires caregivers’ participation. Caregivers’ physical and emotional health and quality of life are significantly impacted when ALS occurs in the family [26,27]. Including caregiver’s perspectives is important when designing and researching complementary ALS treatments.

1.4. The Role of Exercise

Non-invasive ventilation (NIV) for respiratory support, gastrostomy feeding for dysphagia, riluzole and edaravone medications are the four medical methods known to prolong survival for pwALS [28,29].
Until recently, pwALS have been discouraged from exercising based on the assumption that exercise can lead to muscle fatigue and increase patients’ disability [30]. However, this assumption is not supported by the research [31,32,33,34]. To the contrary, there is evidence that physical inactivity secondary to ALS may lead to cardiovascular deconditioning, disuse weakness and consequential muscle atrophy. Some reviews [35,36] support evidence for moderate physical exercise in ALS, whilst highlighting the importance of supervised, individualised training programs. One Cochrane review [37] concluded there was no solid evidence to deem exercise in ALS beneficial or harmful and emphasised the need for further research. A literature review [5] examined a total of 18 exercise-based intervention studies published in peer-reviewed journals between 1960 and 2014. Of these, no experimental studies examined the impact of targeted exercise on speech or swallowing function. Mild- to moderate-intensity limb or respiratory exercise, applied early in the disease, was noted to have a beneficial impact on motor function and survival. New studies [38,39] suggest that strictly monitored exercise programs reduce motor deterioration and improve the functional independence of pwALS. Although there is a lack of evidence supporting the use of strengthening exercises for improving speech in pwALS, there is no evidence of such exercises being harmful [11]. Emerging evidence suggests that respiratory training may have a positive effect on respiratory and swallowing functions in ALS [40,41,42].
In the absence of a curative treatment, a wider range of rehabilitative options has to be considered for pwALS, enabling them to reach their fullest potential and best quality of life (QoL), delaying disease progression and prolonging lifespan [43].

1.5. Music Therapy for ALS: Developing Clinical Approach

Music therapy (MT) is the evidence-based professional clinical application of music and its elements to improve the psychological, emotional, cognitive, physical and social health and well-being of individuals and communities [44,45,46,47]. Professionally trained music therapists are well equipped to provide symptomatic care for people with neurodegenerative diseases [48], adapting interventions to the increasing and changing disability of each patient as the disease progresses, whilst maintaining and developing a trusting therapeutic relationship early in the disease course. Music stimulates global brain activation and shares processing components with other functions, such as those involved in language, movement, reasoning and experiencing emotions [49,50,51,52]. The growth of scientific knowledge about music perception and production and the effects of these on non-musical brain and behaviour functions has led to the development of clinical techniques to treat cognitive, sensory, and motor dysfunctions resulting from neurological injury or disease [53].
Research on clinical music therapy applications for ALS is limited [54] and presents significant challenges for an investigator due to the heterogeneous presentation and progression of the disease [55]. There is also a poor scientific understanding of the disease mechanisms [56] and the ethical issues of research involving terminally ill people [57]. It has been suggested that MT could contribute to interdisciplinary ALS care [58]. There is anecdotal evidence that MT increases mind–body connection [59], and reduces distressing physical symptoms such as dyspnoea and pain, as well as associated feelings of loneliness, anxiety and sadness for patients with advanced ALS [60]. It is further suggested that MT is “pleasant and restorative” for pwALS who have tracheostomy and for their families [61]. It provides families affected by ALS with opportunities for shared meaningful activities [62]. The first RCT of MT with ALS found that active MT increased communication, improved QoL and decreased the physical symptoms of the disease for participants during hospital stay [63]. Music-assisted relaxation may be a useful strategy to optimize the non-invasive ventilation experience for pwALS [64]. Albeit currently underused, MT could be one of the modalities of supportive rehabilitation in ALS, potentially providing multiple benefits for pwALS and their families.
In terms of physiological location and neuronal activation, swallowing, vocalisation and breathing are tightly coordinated and closely related processes [65]. No published research addressing the use of MT techniques for the neurorehabilitation of pwALS has been found (e.g., supporting motor, cognitive, respiratory, swallowing, and speech functions), even though empirical evidence and research with other clinical populations suggest that such interventions may be beneficial [66,67,68,69,70]. The patient’s motivation to work towards therapeutic goals may increase with the use of music [53], and since loss of motivation is a major factor in pwALS, this makes music-based interventions worthy of research [71].

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Study Aim

The aim of this study was to determine the feasibility of a home-based MT protocol as an intervention to support respiratory and bulbar functions in early- and mid-stage ALS. Since this is the first study to examine the role of MT in the physical rehabilitation of pwALS, it has been primarily focused on the safety and tolerability of the treatment protocol. Inquiry was made into the most sensitive and feasible tools to assess the treatment effect on respiratory and bulbar functions in ALS.

2.2. Registration and Ethical Approvals

This study is registered with the U.S. National Library of Medicine ClinicalTrials.gov database, NCT03604822. Ethics clearance has been obtained from the ethics committee at Anglia Ruskin University (Cambridge, UK; the Arts, Laws and Social Sciences FRDSC meeting on 15 December 2017) and from Moscow Municipal Independent Ethics Committee (Moscow, Russia; decision No. 17/16_14.03.2018).

2.3. Study Design

This is an ABA mixed-methods case series with repeated measures. Reliable predictors of decline in ALS are yet to be found [72]. Even the relatively narrow recruitment criteria for this study allowed for vast differences between the participants’ responses to MT treatment and natural disease progression. All participants started the trial simultaneously, each participant receiving treatment and serving as their own control. The duration of participation in this study was 16 weeks, including the lead-in (control) phase (weeks 1–6), the treatment phase (weeks 7–12) and the wash out phase (weeks 13–16) (see Appendix A. Study Consort). Quantitative and qualitative data, including recruitment, retention, adherence, thematic analysis of semi-structured interviews and treatment notes, were collected to determine the feasibility of a home-based MT intervention for bulbar and respiratory rehabilitation in ALS. Biomedical data were collected to assess the long-term and short-term effects of the MT protocol. Such a study design allows for a rigorous and systematic exploration of the processes and outcomes in real-world practice, where the clinical situation is not manipulated [73]. This approach may be especially useful considering the heterogeneity of ALS presentation and progression and the innovative character of the treatment protocol.

2.4. Facility

The study host, ALS Centre Moscow (Russia), is a collaboration between three Moscow hospitals that has provided home-based multidisciplinary care for pwALS and their families since 2012. The incidence of ALS in Russia is 1.25 per 100,000 person-years [74]. Approximately 110 ALS patients out of approximately 950 pwALS residing in the Moscow region receive treatment from the team. MT was first introduced at the Centre in 2013. The medical director of the Centre gave full approval for this study. Three research nurses and two research assistants helped to collect data. The principal researcher implemented the six-week home-based MT treatment for this study and coordinated the research team.

2.5. Recruitment

A consecutive sampling strategy was employed in order to avoid bias in regard to disease onset: all newly diagnosed patients living within the Moscow city limits and meeting the inclusion and exclusion criteria were invited to participate. Recruitment continued until the desired sample size (n = 8) was achieved or a cut-off date for recruitment was reached.

2.6. Inclusion Criteria

Diagnosis of probable or definite ALS by the revised El Escorial criteria [75] confirmed by the neurologist at ALS Moscow Centre prior to screening for enrolment.
(1)
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Functional Rating Scale—Revised (ALSFRS-R) [76] bulbar subscore ≥ 9, but ≤11, where bulbar subscore = the sum of ALSFRS-R questions 1–3 (maximum score of 12);
(2)
Forced Vital Capacity (FVC) greater than 60%;
(3)
Unimpaired cognition as evidenced by Edinburgh Cognitive and Behavioural ALS Screen (ECAS, Russian version) cut-off scores adjusted for age and education [77,78];
(4)
Able to consent to treatment;
(5)
Native speaker of Russian.

2.7. Exclusion Criteria

(1)
Tracheostomy or mechanical ventilation;
(2)
Diaphragmatic pacer;
(3)
Significant concurrent respiratory disease;
(4)
Allergies to barium;
(5)
Receiving any other experimental treatment for dysarthria, dysphagia, dystussia and dyspnoea for the duration of this study;
(6)
Receiving any other music therapy treatment for the duration of this study.

2.8. Caregivers Participating in This Study

If designated by the primary participants, and only with their permission, their main caregivers were contacted and invited to participate in structured interviews before and after the therapy phase of this study.

2.9. Informed Consent

Participants were provided with a participant information sheet. Each participant, including the participating caregivers, signed voluntary informed consent. Participants were provided with the withdrawal form to sign if they wanted to withdraw from this study at any point. Special care was taken when scheduling the MT treatment to avoid interference with the participant’s daily activities.

2.10. The Experimental Music Therapy Treatment Protocol

The experimental music therapy treatment protocol to support bulbar and respiratory functions of persons with early- and mid-stage amyotrophic lateral sclerosis outlines the treatment protocol used in this study. The protocol consists of a series of music-based breathing, gentle stretching, relaxation and singing exercises tailored to the rehabilitative needs of pwALS and constitutes, in a rough approximation, an adaptive voice lesson oriented towards ALD-specific non-musical (rehabilitative) goals.
Upper and lower motor neurone deterioration in ALS result in dysarthria and dysphagia of spastic-flaccid type, although actual presentation varies in each patient and changes with disease progression. Generally, lower motor neurone involvement, characteristic of bulbar onset, leads to flaccid presentation, whilst degeneration of upper motor neurone, characteristic of spinal onset, results in spasticity of bulbar muscles. Muscle relaxation and moderate exercise, as well as learning efficient breathing and voice production techniques, voice care techniques [79] and ALS-specific communication strategies therefore may be helpful, rather than rigorous strengthening oral motor exercises. Based on literature review, including [5,13,14,40,41,42,80,81,82,83,84,85,86], the following therapy objectives for this protocol were decided upon:
(1)
To increase breath support,
(2)
To increase muscle relaxation,
(3)
To increase speech rate,
(4)
To prevent or decrease hypernasality, and
(5)
To maintain coordinated swallow.
Speech-language techniques recommended for pwALS, published MT protocols for bulbar rehabilitation in patients affected by various neurological conditions, were considered [68,87,88,89]. Exercise IX was adapted from Lyle [90]. It involves timed upward-and-backward movement of the soft palate alternated with its relaxation. Proper velopharyngeal closure is essential for healthy swallowing [65] and plays an important role in speech intelligibility by preventing hypernasality [86]. Exercise XII was adapted from a published MT protocol [68] for stroke patients with dysphagia. Vowels ‘a’, ‘I’ and ‘u’ are used because they represent the extremes of vocal tract configuration [91]. Verbal descriptions necessary for understanding the anatomy and physiology of voice production were adopted from a professional voice training technique [92]. Breathing and singing exercises were mostly adopted from McClosky’s vocal technique [93].
The ALS-specific, individualised MT protocol was delivered to the participants in their homes twice weekly for a duration of six weeks by the principal researcher—a professional, board-certified music therapist. Facilitating musical structures were composed by the researcher to support cueing, timing and intensity of breathing and vocalisation exercises. These structures were regularly adjusted by the music therapist to suit the unique capabilities, current individual demands and progress of each participant. One familiar song, selected by each participant upon consultation with the music therapist, was used to facilitate a therapeutic singing exercise closing each session. Caregivers and family members could choose to be present during the sessions, according to the preference of the participating pwALS.
Printed ALS-specific voice health guidelines, compiled by the researcher and based on general vocal health guidelines and ALS-specific speech-language therapy recommendations (see Appendix B. Voice Care Guidelines for Research Participants—Persons with ALS (English translation)), were provided for participants prior to commencing treatment with the aim of promoting healthy voice use habits in daily life.
Black and white drawings from voice textbooks [92,93], depicting vocal tract, posture, the larynx, the vocal fold, diaphragm action in anterior and lateral view, rib cage and abdominal muscles and balance of the head and neck were used as visual aids during the music therapy sessions. The anatomy and physiology of respiration, voice production and swallowing were briefly explained to participants in order to increase their awareness and sense of control over these processes.
MT constitutes a new treatment modality for bulbar and respiratory dysfunction in ALS; thus, the safety and tolerability of the treatment protocol were prioritised. The protocol allowed for ample rest and relaxation possibilities between short exercises involving active muscle work, in order to prevent voice overuse and fatigue [94]. The participants were advised to wear comfortable clothes allowing for unrestricted movement and breathing. They were encouraged to participate to their comfort level in all the exercises suggested and modelled by the MT, and to pause, rest and hydrate as needed. The duration of each visit was approximately one hour, including session opening and closure. The treatment protocol is outlined in Table 1. Experimental music therapy treatment protocol to support bulbar and respiratory functions of persons with early- and mid-stage amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.

2.11. Recommended Exercises for Independent Practice

The participants were encouraged, but not required, to independently practice breathing, relaxation and voice skills learned in MT sessions on the days when no therapist visits were scheduled. A recorded guide (CD or mp3 files provided via USB flash drive) and corresponding printed instructions for independent practice were provided to each participant at the end of the third session (see Appendix C. Sample Recommended Daily Exercises Instructions (English Translation)). The individualised exercise sets consisted of abbreviated (approximately 15 min long) versions of the treatment protocol used in therapy sessions, with adjustments for the tempo, vocal range, preferred musical accompaniment and imagery for relaxation, capabilities and clinical needs unique to each participant, as assessed by the MT during the first two sessions.
New, modified for best tolerance, versions of the exercise sets were provided to the participants before the end of the treatment period, at the eleventh session, to support further, independent practice. The contact details of local music therapists experienced with ALS were provided to help facilitate independent practice post-study period.

2.12. Equipment, Transportation and Setup

Equipment necessary for the MT treatment include an acoustic guitar, a melodica, a smartphone (with a music player and a metronome application), a pocket-sized speaker for sound amplification and a binder containing visual aids for the anatomy and physiology of singing, the treatment protocol, assessment scales and data entry forms. The equipment are lightweight, easily transportable by urban public transportation and require minimal space and time for setup.
Standard portable equipment, including spirometers and data entry forms, were used by qualified nurses to collect biometric data during regular home visits. Participants travelled to a laboratory for videofluoroscopic swallowing study (VFSS). Voice samples were recorded with a headset microphone, a tablet computer and an audio interface in the patient’s home. Structured interviews were typed by a trained research assistant on a tablet computer.

2.13. Feasibility Data Collection and Analysis

Quantitative and qualitative data were collected on recruitment, retention and adherence. Target recruitment over 80%, a retention rate over 70% at the end of the follow-up period and attendance at over 75% of MT sessions delivered were considered the markers of a successful feasibility trial [96,97,98,99]. Self-reported adherence to a suggested, but not required, independent exercise routine was recorded to assess levels of self-motivation that participants demonstrated with regard to music therapy treatment. Any attempt to practice was recorded, even if the exercise set was not fully completed. No fidelity data were collected. No strategies to increase or to control adherence were employed.
The short-term tolerability of the treatment protocol was assessed by measuring changes in ratings on the Ease of Respiration Numerical Rating Scale and the Ease of Speech Numerical Rating Scale (Appendix D. Numerical Rating Scale for Current Perceived Ease of Respiration (English Translation) and Appendix E. Numerical Rating Scale for Current Perceived Ease of Speech (English Translation)), self-reported before and after every MT session.
Structured interviews were conducted pre- and post-treatment to assess the treatment experience of participants (pwALS) and the perspective of their caregivers (see Appendix F. Interviews with Research Participants—Persons with ALS, Conducted Prior to Treatment (Week 5) (English Translation), Appendix G. Interviews with Research Participants—Persons with ALS, Conducted at the End of the Follow-Up Period (Week 16) (English Translation), Appendix H. Interviews with Research Participants—Caregivers of Persons with ALS, Conducted Prior to Treatment (Week 5) (English Translation), and Appendix I. Interviews with Research Participants—Caregivers of Persons with ALS, Conducted at the End of the Follow-Up Period (Week 16) (English Translation)). Reflexive thematic analysis (TA) [100] has been employed to analyse the interviews regarding the treatment experience of research participants—pwALS and their caregivers.
TA is a common method for analysing qualitative data in various research fields. It primarily focuses on identifying and reporting patterns of meaning (themes) within data. A theme captures an important aspect of the data in relation to the research question and presents a patterned meaning within the dataset. The themes may be determined in a number of ways, though the process has to be consistent within each particular TA.
The music therapist’s perspective was assessed through narrative thematic analysis of the individual treatment notes and of the generalised “field notes” submitted by the therapist twice weekly. Narrative TA [101] was applied to the treatment notes and the field notes submitted by the music therapist—principal investigator. Narrative inquiry emphasises preserving the integrity of a particular individual in the course of the analysis. This is essential when researching a novel treatment protocol realised within an ongoing therapeutic relationship.

2.14. Biomedical Data Collection

Assessing bulbar and respiratory dysfunction in ALS presents a challenge for a researcher. Many ALS-specific measurement tools do exist, but, as related research [76,102,103] and problem-oriented discussions in the professional community have revealed (e.g., Bulbar Guidelines Development Symposium, 29th International Symposium on ALS/MND, December 2018), these may not be sensitive enough to reliably measure the change, given that ALS is a rapidly degenerating disease and that the rate of deterioration varies greatly from patient to patient. Predicting the rate of speech and swallow decline has been reported to be especially challenging for clinicians [14,104]. Similarly, although the respiratory subscale of ALSFRS-R is routinely used worldwide to monitor symptoms of respiratory involvement, it only provides limited and sometimes misleading information [105]. Recently published “Provisional best practices guidelines for the evaluation of bulbar dysfunction in Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis” [106] present the first uniform assessment of speech and swallow function recommended for multidisciplinary ALS teams.
A minimally burdensome for the participants, inexpensive and reliable assessment battery to measure bulbar and respiratory changes in early- and mid-stage ALS was selected, based on the analysis of existing research, including [5,81,85,87,88,89,107,108,109,110,111,112,113,114,115,116,117,118,119,120,121,122,123]. Taken into consideration were the availability of technical means and local laboratory capacities, as well as local clinical assessment standards, as, for example, nurses being accustomed to routinely measuring Forced Vital Capacity rather than Slow Vital Capacity. For ethical considerations, home-based assessments were preferred whenever possible, with the exception of a VFSS, a dynamic X-ray that allows visualisation of bolus flow and swallowing physiology, for the evaluation of swallowing safety and efficiency [106].
Raw data were pseudonymised, protected by password and securely stored in a computer system at ALS Centre Moscow, in accordance with General Data Protection Regulation. A keyword system was developed to pseudonymise the physiological measurements and acoustic samples. The system was designed with the purpose to blind the analysts to the data collection point sequence. It was not possible to blind the data collectors to the condition and treatment of the participants due to the transparent, community-oriented nature of multidisciplinary team care practiced at the host facility.

2.15. Outcome Measures to Assess Long-Term Changes in Respiration

Maximal Inspiratory Pressure (MIP), Maximal Expiratory Pressure (MEP), and Forced Vital Capacity (FVC) were measured at four time points to assess long-term changes in respiration.

2.16. Outcome Measures to Assess Long-Term Changes in Cough

Peak Expiratory Flow (PEF) was measured at four time points to assess long-term changes in cough.

2.17. Outcome Measures to Assess Long-Term Changes in Swallowing

The Center for Neurologic Study Bulbar Function Scale (CNS-BFS) swallowing subscore, recorded at four time points, and VFSS, conducted at three time points, were used to assess long-term changes in swallowing. VFSS was conducted by a qualified speech and language specialist in a laboratory in Moscow, using a BV Pulsera Mobile C-arm fluoroscope, pulsing at 30 pulses per second and recorded on a built-in Medical DVD Recorder at 30 frames per second. A volume of 10 mL nectar and pudding boluses were prepared with Nestle (TUC-xanthan gum) at 100% w/v barium concentration. Transportation and trained volunteer assistance was provided for each participant during the visits to a laboratory for VFSS.
VFSS video clips were reviewed and scored by a trained speech-language pathologist blinded to the sequence, using frame-by-frame analysis following operational definitions outlined by [124]. Pixel-based measures were anatomically referenced, and expressed as a percent relative to the height of cervical vertebrae C2 to C4 (i.e., %C2–4). The following measures were obtained: Change in Time-to-Laryngeal Vestibule Closure (ms), Change in Maximum Pharyngeal Constriction Area (%C2–42), Change in Peak Position of the Hyoid Bone (%C2–4), Change in Penetration–Aspiration Scale Score (worst) [125], Change in Total Pharyngeal Residue C24 area, measured in percent (%C2–4).

2.18. Outcome Measures to Assess Long-Term Changes in Speech

The Center for Neurologic Study Bulbar Function Scale (CNS-BFS) speech subscore, recorded at four time points, and voice samples, recorded at four time points as high-definition .wav files, were used to assess long-term changes in speech. The following voice samples were recorded: spontaneous speech (2 min), passage reading (2 min), /pa/, /ta/, /ka/ syllables sequence repeated as clearly, as fast, as many times as possible on one exhalation (two attempts, the best is used for calculations), /ba/ syllable repeated as clear, as fast, as many times as possible on one exhalation (2 attempts, the best is used for calculations), /a/ sound sustained for as long as possible, at participant’s most comfortable pitch level, on one exhalation (two attempts, the best is used for calculations), separate vowels (A, E, I, O, U) uttered in sequence, with pauses in between, as clearly as possible (two attempts, the best is used for calculations). Since Russian was the native language for all the participants, The Phonetically Representative Russian Text For Fundamental and Applied Studies of Russian Speech created by [126] was substituted for Rainbow passage or Bamboo passage routinely used in speech-language therapy practice in the UK and in the USA (see Appendix J. Text for Oral Reading Task (Russian) for the full text).
Voice samples were recorded digitally in .wav format, using a Shure WH20XLR Dynamic Headset Microphone, Alesis IO Dock audio interface, Apple iPad 2 tablet and GarageBand software. Participants were encouraged to rest and hydrate between the various recording tasks in order to avoid fatigue and vocal strain. This setup allows control of the sound intensity levels and the distance between the participant’s mouth and the microphone head [70], thus ensuring high quality and consistency of the recordings.
Acoustic analysis of the voice samples was conducted using the PRAAT linguistic computer program—a scientific tool for analysing speech spectrograms [127]. Compared to perceptual analysis, acoustic speech analysis of sound waveform offers the advantage of describing the voice objectively [128,129,130]. Acoustic analysis of the recorded voice samples in the PRAAT computer program was performed to calculate: Change in Maximum Phonation Time (MPT), sound /a/, measured in seconds; Change in Maximum Repetition Rate—Alternating (MRR-A), /pataka/ sequence, measured in total number of syllables uttered; Change in Maximum Repetition Rate—Sequential (MRR-S), /ba/ syllable, measured in total number of syllables uttered; Change in Fundamental frequency (F0), measured in Hz; Change in Jitter, local, measured in percent; Change in Shimmer, local, measured in percent; Change in Harmonics-to-Noise Ratio (HNR), measured in Db; Change in Vowel Space Area, measured squared Hz, Change in Speaking rate, measured in words per minute; Change in Articulation rate, measured in words per minute; Change in Speech–pause ratio, measured in milliseconds per minute; Change in Pause frequency, measured in number of pauses per minute.
Perceptual analysis of the same voice samples was conducted by three qualified speech pathologists to assess Change in hypernasality level, measured in points on the scale from “1” (severe hypernasality) to “4” (normal resonance), and the inter-rater reliability was calculated.
For a detailed description of the outcome measures, see Table 2. Outcome measures and data collection summary table.

2.19. Biomedical Data Analysis

Extensive secondary (biomedical) data to evaluate respiratory and bulbar changes were collected at multiple time points to provide a perspective on data collection in a home-based clinical trial. This process allowed assessment of the choice of measurement outcomes and provided a perspective on data collection. Only descriptive statistics were used to present and analyse the biomedical data, since, due to the small number of participants (n = 7) and the heterogeneity of the group, any statistical inference would be unreliable.
All the biomedical measurements for this study, with the exception of the videofluoroscopic swallowing study, were obtained at four time points:
  • Time point 1 = baseline (week 1),
  • Time point 2 = pre-treatment (week 6),
  • Time point 3 = post-treatment (week 12), and
  • Time point 4 = at the end of the follow-up period (week 16).
The three periods between the time points were marked as the “run-in” (weeks 1–6), “treatment” (weeks 7–12), and “follow-up” (weeks 13–16) periods.
A laboratory-based videofluoroscopic swallowing study (VFSS) was conducted only at three time points, in order to minimise the burden for the participants, as this test required transportation to the lab. VFSS measurements were obtained at three time points:
  • Time point 1 = baseline (week 1),
  • Time point 2 = pre-treatment (week 6), and
  • Time point 3 = post-treatment (week 12).
The two periods between these time points are the same “run-in” (weeks 1–6) and “treatment” (weeks 7–12) periods, with the “follow-up” period omitted.
Changes in trends rather than the numerical values were used to assess the effectiveness of the treatment, since functional decline is expected with ALS progression. When interpreting the long-term data outcomes, it was understood that the direction and the rate of change observed during the run-in period is expected to stay similar if MT treatment has no effect. If MT had been beneficial for a participant, the trend would have been reversed. If the trend was unchanged or amplified, the reason could be that MT had had a negative effect or that participants’ condition had declined rapidly.
To assess the change in trends, for each of three (or two, in case of videofluoroscopic swallowing study) periods a trend was calculated as a rate of change of the measurement over time (in weeks):
  • Trendrun-in = (Mt2 − Mt1)/6,
  • Trendtreatment = (Mt3 − Mt2)/6, and
  • Trendfollow-up = (Mt4 − Mt3)/4.
where Mtn is the measurement value at time point n. The lengths of the “run-in” and “treatment” periods are six weeks and the “follow-up” period is four weeks, hence the difference denominators in the formulas.

3. Main Study Findings

3.1. Demographics

Six females and two males were recruited. Seven presented with spinal ALS onset type, and one participant presented with bulbar onset. The mean age of the participants was 58.1 years. Total ALSFRS-R scores of the participants ranged from 31 to 42 points at recruitment, representing the range of motor and respiratory abilities of the participants. Seven participants completed this study.
Six caregivers were recruited. The relations of the participating caregivers to the participants—persons with ALS—were as follows: four spouses (two wives and two husbands) and two adult children (daughters in both cases). Five caregivers lived in the same household (city apartment) with their relative who had ALS.
Only the data from the seven participants who completed this study were analysed.

3.2. Feasibility Data Analysis Results

Analysis of the primary data provides the evidence that it is feasible to implement the suggested study protocol for home-based music therapy as an intervention to support respiratory and bulbar functions in early- and mid-stage ALS. The recruitment rate was 100%, the retention rate was 87.5% and mean adherence was 95.4%—values above the target markers for the protocol feasibility.
Data on the short-term tolerability of the treatment protocol indicated that the protocol was generally well tolerated by the study participants, with the overall trends pointing upwards for both the Ease of Respiration Numerical Rating Scale (p-value = 0.296) and the Ease of Speech Numerical Rating Scale (p-value = 0.270), even though, as expected in a small study with only seven subjects, neither change was statistically significant. Mean adherence to suggested independent exercise routine constituted 53%. It is indicative that all the participants attempted the independent exercise routine. Common reasons for not engaging into the independent practice routine included not feeling well (e.g., due to high blood pressure and menses), being too busy to exercise (due to work, health care or other commitments), and being too tired to exercise. No participants mentioned the provided individual set of exercises being too challenging among the reasons for not engaging into independent practice routine.
Following reflexive TA, all the participants reported MT to be a pleasurable experience and perceived the suggested independent music therapy exercises as easy to perform. Most pwALS believed that MT was beneficial for their speech and respiration and that it helped them learn new breathing and vocal skills, but did not affect their swallowing. Some participants perceived that MT improved their communication. Most caregivers reported that MT improved or sustained bulbar and respiratory functions of the participants with ALS. Some caregivers reported that the MT process and, in particular, communication with the music therapist had a positive effect on the psychological state of the pwALS, and that participation of their family members affected by ALS in MT had a positive effect on caregiver’s own psychological state.
Brief narrative accounts of individual music therapy sessions were submitted by the principal researcher after every treatment session, total of 80. Additionally, field notes—generalised reflections on the course of research and tendencies within the group during the treatment phase—were submitted by the principal researcher, total of 13. The following themes were analysed in detail: (1) logistics of the suggested home-based MT treatment, (2) essential professional self-care of music therapist, (3) experimental treatment protocol implementation (including synchronous progress in the cohort, music preferences and song choice, individual treatment protocol adjustments, and audio and video recording of the sessions), (4) the music-assisted relaxation process, (5) post-treatment exercises for individual practice, and (6) the role of music therapist in the protocol implementation.
The results of the narrative TA indicate that the MT protocol is safe, if implemented with necessary individual modifications by a professional music therapist.

3.3. Biomedical Data Analysis Results

Most bulbar and respiratory functional parameters were sustained or improved at a higher rate during the treatment period, as compared to the run-in (control) period, as evident from the mean trends for the 32 biomedical measurement parameters across respiratory, speech and swallowing domains.

3.4. Long-Term Changes in Respiration

FVC, MIP, and MEP were measured at the four time points to assess long-term changes in respiration. Mean trends for all three outcome measures suggest that respiratory functional parameters of the study participants were sustained or improved during the treatment period. For a summary of the individual and mean measurements at four assessment points, see Table 3 for FVC (%), Table 4 for MIP (cm H2O) and Table 5 for MEP (cm H2O).

3.5. Long-Term Changes in Cough

Peak Expiratory Flow (PEF) was measured at the four time points to assess long-term changes in cough. Mean trends suggest that the cough functional parameters of the study participants improved during the treatment period. For a summary of the individual and mean measurements at four assessment points, see Table 6. PEF (%) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.

3.6. Long-Term Changes in Speech

The Center for Neurologic Study Bulbar Function Scale (CNS-BFS) speech subscore was measured at four time points to assess long-term changes in speech. A lower score corresponds to better functioning. For a summary of the individual and mean measurements at four assessment points, see Table 7. CNS-BFS speech subscore (points) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
Voice samples were recorded at four time points to assess long-term changes in speech and resulted in the following outcomes:
(1)
Maximum Phonation Time (MPT), sound /a/, measured in seconds, higher score corresponds to better functioning;
(2)
Jitter, local, sound /a/, measured in percent, lower score corresponds to better functioning;
(3)
Shimmer, local, sound /a/, measured in percent, lower score corresponds to better functioning;
(4)
Harmonics-to-Noise Ratio (HNR), sound /a/ measured in Db, higher score corresponds to better functioning;
(5)
Maximum Repetition Rate—Alternating (AMR), /pataka/ sequence, measured in total number of syllables uttered, higher score corresponds to better functioning;
(6)
Maximum Repetition Rate—Sequential (SMR), /ba/ syllable, measured in total number of syllables uttered, higher score corresponds to better functioning;
(7)
Vowel Space Area, vowels /a, e, i, o, u/, measured in squared Hz, higher score corresponds to better functioning;
(8)
Fundamental frequency (F0), oral reading, measured in Hz, higher score corresponds to better functioning;
(9)
Speaking rate, oral reading, measured in words per minute, higher score corresponds to better functioning;
(10)
Speech–pause ratio, oral reading, measured in seconds per minute, lower score corresponds to better functioning;
(11)
Pause frequency, oral reading, measured in number of pauses per minute, lower score corresponds to better functioning;
(12)
Hypernasality level, oral reading, measured in points, higher score corresponds to better functioning.
Initially, two minutes of oral passage reading and two minutes of spontaneous speech were included in the list of recorded voice samples. Although these tasks presented no issues for most participants, some were fatigued by the two-minute oral reading, gasping for breath and reading in a quieter or strained voice by the end of the first minute. Others became too emotional when recording spontaneous speech, changing the subject very soon from the given neutral theme to a discussion of their disease progression or family issues. For ethical considerations, the decision was made not to record spontaneous speech and to shorten the oral reading passage to include only the first five sentences. All participants needed more than 30 s to complete reading this passage.
Perceptual analysis of the voice samples was conducted by three qualified speech pathologists, native Russian speakers, to assess changes in hypernasality levels, measured in points on the scale from “1” (severe hypernasality) to “4” (normal resonance). The inter-rater reliability between the three raters was calculated and was low at 52%.
For a summary of the individual and mean speech measurement outcomes at four assessment points, see Table 8 for MPT (seconds), Table 9 for Jitter (local, %), Table 10 for Shimmer (local, %), Table 11 for HNR (Db), Table 12 for MRR-A (syllables, total), Table 13 for MRR-S (syllables, total), Table 14 for VSA (Hertz, squared), Table 15 for Fundamental frequency (Hz), Table 16 for Speaking rate (words per minute), Table 17 for Speech–pause ratio (seconds per minute), and Table 18 for hypernasality level (points).

3.7. Long-Term Changes in Swallowing

The Center for Neurologic Study Bulbar Function Scale (CNS-BFS) swallowing subscore, recorded at four time points, was used to assess long-term changes in swallowing. See Table 19 for individual and mean scores. A lower score corresponds to better functioning.
Videofluoroscopic swallowing study (VFSS) video clips were recorded at three time points to assess long-term changes in swallowing and resulted in the following outcomes:
(1)
Time-to-Laryngeal Vestibule Closure, nectar 10 mL, measured in ms, lower score corresponds to better functioning;
(2)
Time-to-Laryngeal Vestibule Closure, pudding 10 mL, measured in ms, lower score corresponds to better functioning;
(3)
Maximum Pharyngeal Constriction Area, nectar 10 mL, measured in %C2–42 lower score corresponds to better functioning;
(4)
Maximum Pharyngeal Constriction Area, pudding 10 mL, measured in %C2–42, lower score corresponds to better functioning;
(5)
Peak Position of the Hyoid Bone, nectar 10 mL, measured in %C2–4 higher score corresponds to better functioning;
(6)
Peak Position of the Hyoid Bone, pudding 10 mL, measured in %C2–4, higher score corresponds to better functioning;
(7)
Penetration–Aspiration Scale Score (worst), nectar 10 mL, measured in points lower score corresponds to better functioning;
(8)
Penetration–Aspiration Scale Score (worst), pudding 10 mL, measured in points, lower score corresponds to better functioning;
(9)
Total Pharyngeal Residue C24area, nectar 10 mL, measured in %C2–4, lower score corresponds to better functioning;
(10)
Total Pharyngeal Residue C24area, pudding 10 mL, measured in %C2–4, lower score corresponds to better functioning;
(11)
Laryngeal vestibule closure, nectar 10 mL, described as complete, partial, or incomplete, LVC described as “complete” corresponds to a safe swallow;
(12)
Laryngeal vestibule closure, pudding 10 mL, described as complete, partial, or incomplete, LVC described as “complete” corresponds to a safe swallow.
All participants who completed this study made all three visits to the laboratory for VFSS and followed the data collection protocol. However, consistent data from all three time points are only available for five participants, for two samples (nectar and pudding). The data are missing due to a mistake in video capturing: some clips were only recorded by an external video camera, but not by the built-in Medical DVD recorded of the BV Pulsera Mobile C-arm fluoroscope. The quality of the video from the external camera was sufficient for descriptive clinical swallowing assessment by a speech and language specialist, but too poor for the calculations used in this study to take place. For the participants with the missing high-quality video recordings, no VFSS data were analysed. No VFSS data were analysed for liquid samples.
For a summary of the individual and mean swallowing measurement outcomes at three assessment points, see Table 20 for LVCrt, nectar 10 mL (ms); Table 21 for LVCrt pudding 10 mL (ms); Table 22 for MPCAn, nectar 10 mL (%C2–42); Table 23 for MPCAn, pudding 10 mL (%C2–42); Table 24 for PeakXY, nectar 10 mL (%C2–4); Table 25 for PeakXY, pudding 10 mL (%C2–4); Table 26 for PAS (worst), nectar 10 mL (points); Table 27 for PAS (worst), pudding 10 mL (points); Table 28 for TotC24, nectar 10 mL (%C2–4); Table 29 for TotC24, pudding 10 mL (%C2–4); Table 30 for LVC, nectar 10 mL; Table 31 for LVC, pudding 10 mL.

4. Discussion

4.1. The Feasibility of the Suggested Study Protocol

Primary data analysis provides first evidence that it is feasible to use the suggested study protocol for home-based MT as an intervention to support respiratory and bulbar function in early- and mid-stage ALS.
An innovative, ALS-specific MT protocol was developed by the principal researcher and used as a treatment intervention in this study. A MT session following the suggested protocol resembles an adaptive voice lesson, where a music tutor works with a singer to improve posture, breath support, resonance, intonation, articulation and voice projection. However, this protocol, through the use of music, musical structures and musical interactions, focuses on non-musical, rehabilitative goals and objectives. These goals, which are ALS specific and common for the whole cohort, are to increase breath support and muscle relaxation, to maintain speech rate, prevent or decrease hypernasality, and to maintain swallow coordination. The individual objectives were related to these goals, but depended on the particular symptoms, progress, actual assessment and the observed current state of each participant. Data on the short-term tolerability of the treatment protocol indicate that the protocol was generally well tolerated. Additionally, all the participants reported MT to be a pleasurable experience and perceived the suggested independent MT exercises as easy to perform. This is consistent with previous findings that musical cueing during physical exercises decreased perceived exertion and perceived fatigue, as compared to treatment not supported by music [131,132].

4.2. Unique Properties of MT Interventions and the Potential Role of MT in MDT ALS Care

Facilitating musical structures, mostly in the form of the guitar accompaniment, make this MT treatment inherently different from the speech therapy or the physical therapy process. Priming the ability of an external auditory cue to stimulate recruitment of motor neurons at the spinal cord level, and cueing of the movement period by rhythmic synchronisation throughout the whole duration and trajectory of the movement [133,134] are the essential mechanisms behind the use of music in sensorimotor rehabilitation. Rhythmic stimulation increases endurance and motivation [135], and enhances memory and cognition [136]. Rhythm can be employed to improve temporal characteristics of speaking, such as fluency, articulatory rate, pause time and intelligibility of speaking [53]. Whilst rhythm is essential, there are many more parameter characteristics to the facilitating musical structures. These include the tempo, pitch, tonality and rhythm changes and can be modified by the music therapist during the session in various ways to best support the work on the rehabilitative objectives for each participant. For example, the range of a singing exercise can be expanded after the participant has learned to better control their laryngeal elevation or the tempo in melodica exercise could be decreased to allow longer phrases, which means longer exhalation (i.e., potentially increased lung capacity). Additionally, vice versa, the tempo of singing exercises can be gradually reduced to accommodate the deterioration of function experienced as a result of disease progression, still allowing the work on articulation. One example of the unique effect music-supported therapy has is the fact that for all the participants, their comfortable singing range was more extensive than their speaking range. It appears to be safe and effective to ask participants to sing slightly higher than their normal (as affected by ALS) speaking range.
Unlike a vocal coach, the therapist has to be similarly attentive to the non-musical elements of the protocol. For example, if a participant presents with severe hypernasality, the music therapist can replace the “hah-mah-mah” sequence with the “hah-gah-gah” sequence in a singing exercise to help the participant strengthen their velopharyngeal closure; or, if excessive jaw muscle tightness is a problem, the participant can be instructed to support the jaw with their hand. To make these modifications, the therapist has to be a skilled clinician and to have a deep theoretical understanding of the anatomical and neurological mechanisms behind the bulbar and respiratory functional changes in ALS.
Proficiency in MT requires the complex combination of knowledge that includes music perception and production mechanisms, music composition, performance and goal-oriented improvisation, basic psychology, psychopathology, social science, anatomy, physiology and neurology, treatment planning, documentation, research and ethics. This diverse expertise allows music therapists to plan music interventions and to provide and adjust musical structures in real time to support health goals in the context of multidisciplinary ALS care.
The therapeutic relationship between a therapist and a client is always at the core of the MT process, however structured and prescriptive the therapist-led protocol may be. As follows from the TA of the individual treatment notes and generalised “field notes” submitted by the music therapist, most participants’ need for authentic communication, validation and open exploration of challenging personal ALS-related topics appeared immense. Only one of the participants enjoyed strong psychological support available from the family. Keeping the balance of providing basic psycho-emotional support enough for each participant to work on their therapy goals without switching over to music psychotherapy presents a professional objective for a music therapist when implementing this protocol. Additionally, it highlights the need for formal psychological support services being readily available for pwALS.

4.3. Study Limitations

The small sample size is an obvious limitation of this feasibility study.
There are certain limitations to this research resulting from the disparity of treatment and evaluation between ALS clinical facilities around the world. In particular, this resulted in missing VFSS data, absence of reliable tools to assess nasalance acoustically and use of the Center for Neurologic Study Bulbar Function Scale (CNS-BFS) which was not validated for use in Russian at the time this study was conducted.
With the exception of VFSS data, data analysis for this study was ultimately performed by the principal researcher, who also developed the experimental protocol and provided the treatment. Combining these roles could lead to biased interpretation of the data.
The interviews were conducted in Russian, the language native to the participants and the research assistants, and translated into English by the principal researcher, who speaks both Russian and English. This could result in language and cultural bias.
Finally, the duration of the follow-up phase was planned to be shorter (at four weeks) than the run-in and the treatment phases (six weeks each), due to the cultural context. In the summer, most people in Russia who are unemployed move temporarily to their country houses. Extending the follow-up period to six weeks could prevent follow-up data collection.

4.4. Measuring Changes in Bulbar Functions in ALS

The biomedical data were collected as secondary data in this study, in order to understand if the chosen outcome measurements and parameters were feasible and sensitive enough to measure changes in bulbar and respiratory functioning in ALS across the 16 weeks. Whilst respiratory function assessment tools for ALS are largely standardised, evaluation of bulbar dysfunction in ALS remains the central topic of ALS clinical care and research.
Voice samples were used to assess long-term changes in speech for this study. Acoustic analysis of voice samples in the PRAAT computer program was preferred to clinician-based perceptual analysis for objectivity and logistic convenience [128,129,130]. Whilst instrumental evaluations, including acoustic, aerodynamic and kinematic methodologies [86,122] can provide even more precise information regarding bulbar decline in ALS, these require a trained specialist’s presence, may be invasive, and require the purchase of specialist and expensive equipment and materials. Voice sampling requires less expensive and less specialised equipment. The process of recording takes less than 10 min of participants’ time and does not require the presence of a highly trained speech-language specialist at the point of data collection. Acoustic analysis of these voice samples has to be planned and carried out by a qualified phonetician or speech-language specialist who is blinded to the time order of the recordings. Such analysis is a largely automated, objective, fast and inexpensive way to assess speech in ALS when instrumental evaluation is not possible. One important exception to this is nasalance assessment. Increased nasalance (hypernasality) is a prominent characteristic of speech decline in ALS and directly affects speech intelligibility [137]. Acoustic analysis does not offer consistent assessment of hypernasality in speech, unlike other speech parameters. Clinician-based analysis of the recorded samples was conducted for this study to assess nasalance of the voice samples perceptually. Low inter-rater reliability was calculated between the three raters, who were qualified speech pathologists. It may be concluded that perceptual analysis of nasalance in ALS is not reliable as well. Aerodynamic measure of nasal flow has been recently reported to be the most efficient way to evaluate velopharyngeal dysfunction in ALS [138] and can be recommended for evaluation of nasalance in clinical practice and in future research.
VFSS has been recommended in the guidelines document as the most accurate tool to assess the risk for silent aspiration and dysphagia in people with ALS [104]. This is a laboratory-based test, which may impose more burden onto the participants than home-based tests. The participants are required to travel to a medical facility, the procedure takes at least 30 min, and some participants may find the taste and consistency of the barium unpleasant. However, our study demonstrates that, with adequate support from a community-based ALS care centre, the VFSS procedure was well tolerated by ALS patients. Such support included volunteer assistance with transportation and navigating the non-accessible urban environment. All the participants chose to take part in all three VFSS assessments during the first 12 weeks of this study. Frame-by-frame analysis of video clips recorded during VFSS was used to assess long-term changes in swallowing for this study. The analysis was performed during the data analysis phase of this study by a highly qualified speech-language pathologist who was blinded to the time order of the video clip recordings and used published operational definitions [124]. Such specialist analysis of VFSS video clips has been reported to be a reliable [139] and feasible way to evaluate swallowing dysfunction in ALS.
To summarise, the standard home-based instrumental respiratory tests, the videofluoroscopic study (VFSS) with subsequent frame-by-frame analysis of video clips, the acoustic analysis of recorded voice samples, along with self-reported scales such as CNS-BFS used in this study appear to be a feasible and effective way to assess respiratory and bulbar function in ALS. Aerodynamic measure of nasal flow can be recommended for reliable evaluation of nasalance in ALS.

4.5. The Need for an Efficacy Study

Although most mean trends in biomedical data suggest that the bulbar and respiratory functions of the group participants were sustained or improved during the treatment period, whilst, in most cases, the same functions deteriorated during the run-in and follow-up periods, no general assumptions should be drawn. The sample size of this feasibility study is very small, especially considering the partially missing VFSS data, and the individual responses of the participants to treatment vary. A study with the main goal of understanding the effect of the described MT protocol on bulbar and respiratory dysfunction in ALS has to be designed with a larger cohort.
Whilst randomised control trials are considered the gold standard for evidence-based practice, there are limitations to this design specific to music therapy treatment for ALS. For example, blinding of the participants is not possible in a music therapy trial [140] and there are ethical implications for randomisation of the palliative patients into the control group, since no other comprehensive treatment for bulbar and respiratory decline in ALS was found in the literature. ALS presentation and progression are very heterogeneous and existing measures of assessment of ALS progression have limited sensitivity, which results in the need for long trials with large sample sizes. A better understanding of the disease would improve the overall clinical study design and allow for small sample sizes, for example, through stratification based on predictive baseline values [72]. Every person with ALS follows their own pattern of disease progression, and it is the individual rate of decline to date that may, to some extent, predict their future decline. It can be argued therefore that the design of the subsequent study should employ the same ABA design as the current study, where the participants serve as their own controls.

4.6. Suggested Study Protocol Modifications

Based on the feasibility data from the current study, it is strongly advised that a mental health assessment is added to the list of the inclusion criteria for study of efficacy. Screening for depression, anxiety, and hopelessness, and availability of social support and psychiatric illness at recruitment need to be considered [141].
It can be recommended that no spontaneous speech samples are collected for the subsequent study and that the oral reading task is limited to a one-minute sample. This is an important ethical consideration, with the goal to prevent voice fatigue and potential emotional vulnerability of the participants, as discussed above. The Bamboo passage can be recommended to be used as the oral reading task for native English speakers [142]. Analogous passages will have to be identified to evaluate the change in speech parameters in other languages.
Table 32 presents the suggested list of outcome measures and parameters to assess the effect of the MT treatment protocol on the bulbar and respiratory functions of the participants for the efficacy study. For all the outcome measures, the data have to be collected at four points: week 1 (baseline), week 6 (beginning of treatment), week 12 (end of treatment) and week 18 (end of washout).

5. Conclusions

This is the first biomedical MT study involving pwALS and the first study of any kind to systematically look at supporting bulbar and respiratory functions in ALS. The data from the 16 week ABA design feasibility trial suggest that the MT protocol has no adverse effect on bulbar and respiratory functions of persons with ALS, in the short term or in the long term, and that the home-based treatment was perceived as pleasant, motivating and beneficial by the seven research participants. A comprehensive battery of outcome measurements and parameters to reliably evaluate the therapy-induced change in bulbar and respiratory functions was defined. Using these measurements, the biomedical data were collected as secondary data in this trial. Positive trends for bulbar and respiratory parameters were observed as a result of the MT treatment. The study protocol was feasible, with minor modifications. A subsequent large-cohort study with the aim of assessing the effectiveness of the treatment protocol is warranted.

Author Contributions

Conceptualisation, A.T.A.K.; methodology, A.T.A.K., A.J.S., L.B., J.C.F., J.Z. and M.E.; investigation, A.T.A.K.; resources, Z.B.; data curation, A.T.A.K.; writing—original draft preparation, A.T.A.K.; writing—review and editing, A.T.A.K. and A.J.S.; visualisation, A.T.A.K. and A.J.S.; supervision, A.J.S., J.C.F. and L.B.; project administration, A.T.A.K.; funding acquisition, A.T.A.K. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This study was generously supported by The Stephen Hawking Foundation (UK), BOSE Corporation (USA), Remedywave (USA), “Live Now” charitable foundation (RUSSIA) and crowdfunding donations through Palliative Care Initiative, Inc. (USA).

Institutional Review Board Statement

This study was conducted in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki, and approved by the Departmental Research Ethics Panel (DREP) under the terms of Anglia Ruskin University’s research ethics policy on 15 December 2017) and the Moscow Municipal Independent Ethics Committee (Moscow, Russia; decision № 17/16_14.03.2018).

Informed Consent Statement

Informed consent was obtained from all subjects involved in this study.

Data Availability Statement

Not applicable.

Acknowledgments

We are immensely grateful to all the external expert advisors who have helped to move this research forward: Marina Bialik at Palliative Care Initiative (USA), Inc.; Maria Pakosh, Yana Batmanova and Sergey Korneychuk—the research assistants who collected data; Richard Sloan at West Dorset MND Association (UK); Jordan Green, CCC-SLP, at MGH Institute of Health Professions (Boston, MA, USA); Emily Plowman, CCC-SLP, at the University of Florida (USA); Yana Yunusova, CCC-SLP, at the University of Toronto; Ashley Waito, PhD, SLO (C), CCC-SLP at the Swallowing Rehabilitation Research Laboratory, Toronto Rehabilitation Institute—University Health Network, Ontario, Canada for advising on the videofluoroscopic measurements; Ekaterina Bruno, CCC-SLP (Boston, MA, USA); Anastasia Beltukova, music therapist, at “Turmalin” (Moscow, Russia); Alex Sherman at the Neurological Clinical Research Institute at Massachusetts General Hospital (Boston, USA); Kirill Gorbachev at Buyanov Moscow City Clinical Hospital (Moscow, Russia); Vera Fominykh at Buyanov Moscow City Clinical Hospital (Moscow, Russia); Kathy Mitchell at ALS/MND Alliance (Ottawa, Canada); Alfredo Raglio at University of Pavia (Italy); Victoria Edwards, SLT, Siofra Mulkerrin, SLT, and the rest of MND team at Arthur Rank Hospice (Cambridge, UK); Ruslan Semenov, music therapist, Daria Puzanok, nurse, Anna Kasianova, Andrey Prokofev, administrators at ALS Moscow Centre (Russian); Daria Ivanchenko, logopedist (Moscow, Russia); Tina Georgievskaya, vocal coach (Moscow, Russia); Natalia Semina at Rehabilitation centre “Aprel” (Moscow, Russia), Maria Gostintseva, Andrey Demidov, Victoria Petrova and many other persons living with ALS, caregivers, volunteers and care specialists who have generously shared their ideas and feedback with our research team.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest. The funders had no role in the design of the study; in the collection, analyses, or interpretation of data; in the writing of the manuscript, or in the decision to publish the results.

Appendix A. Study Consort

Approximately 110 ALS patients in the Moscow region are followed by the ALS Centre Moscow team. All newly diagnosed patients living in Moscow and meeting the inclusion and exclusion criteria were invited to participate, until the desired sample size (n = 8) was achieved. Age: 18+; ALSFRS-R bulbar subscore ≥ 9, but ≤11; FVC > 60%; unimpaired cognition (ECAS); can consent; native Russian speakers; no diaphragmatic pacer; notracheostomy; no significant concurrent respiratory diseases; not receiving other music therapy or other experimental treatment for bulbar and respiratory symptoms. Participants started the trial simultaneously. Each participant received treatment and served as their own control.
Week 1Data collection: home based—FVC, MIP, MEP, PEF, CNS-BFS swallowing and bulbar subscores, voice samples; lab—VFSS.
Week 5Data collection: participant interview, caregiver interview (questionnaire)
Treatment:
weeks 6–12
Music therapy treatment (2 × per week for 6 weeks) and data collection: home based—NRS respiration and NRS speech scales, attendance, adherence to independent exercises routine (weeks 7–12), treatment notes
Week 6Data collection: home based—FVC, MIP, MEP, PEF, CNS-BFS swallowing and bulbar subscores, voice samples; lab—VFSS
Week 12Data collection: home based—FVC, MIP, MEP, PEF, CNS-BFS swallowing and bulbar subscores, voice samples; lab—VFSS
Week 13Data collection: participant interview, caregiver interview (questionnaire)
Follow up:
week 16
Follow-up data collection: home based—FVC, MIP, MEP, PEF, CNS-BFS swallowing and bulbar subscores, voice samples
Data analysisAnalysis of feasibility and biometric data, thematic analysis of questionnaire data

Appendix B. Voice Care Guidelines for Research Participants—Persons with ALS (English Translation)

10 Rules of Voice Care
  • Do not talk for too long. If your voice is tired, be sure to take a break.
  • Do not talk in a noisy environment (with the TV turned on, in the car, in public transport). Only talk to those who are near you. Do not shout. Use a bell or other signal to attract attention.
  • Maintain even posture and speak “from the diaphragm”.
  • Drink enough water throughout the day.
  • Rest. If you are tired, try not to talk. Get enough sleep.
  • Slow down your speech and stretch sounds, especially at the ends of words, as if you were singing.
  • Speak lightly—in a range convenient for you (not too low and not too high) and with a comfortable volume (do not scream or whisper).
  • Regularly relax the muscles of the face, neck and shoulders.
  • If speaking causes pain, do not speak. Do not use cough drops to relieve a sore throat and keep talking: this only masks the symptoms and you can damage your voice.
  • Take care of yourself: our emotions affect our voice and breath. Do everything you can to reduce stress in your life and get positive experiences regularly.
Alisa Apreleva, MT-BC, NMT, music therapist. http://alsmusictherapy.org (accessed on 9 March 2022).

Appendix C. Sample Recommended Daily Exercises Instructions (English Translation)

This is an English translation of sample recommended daily exercises instructions for the study participants. Please note that the following instructions are for sample purposes only. It is important that the exercises are adjusted by a certified music therapist to meet individual preferences and physical capabilities of each patient. In addition to an individualized printout in Russian, a corresponding individualized audio guide with the instructions in Russian and appropriate music tracks will be provided for each participant to make the exercise routine easier.
RECOMMENDED DAILY MUSIC THERAPY EXERCISES
These exercises are advised, but not required for you to perform on the days when you do not have a music therapy session. You have experienced all these exercises during your music therapy sessions with your therapist. Practice the assigned exercises ONCE DAILY. You will need about 30 min to do the exercises.
You may choose to use the separate music tracks or the accompanying audio guide provided by your music therapist. All the instructions and the music accompaniment have been tailored to meet your voice range, tempo and medical needs. Remember to do these exercises when you are rested and hydrated. Wear comfortable clothes allowing for unrestricted movement and breathing. Find a comfortable space to sit. Minimize noise and distractions: turn off TV and radio, close the windows if you live on a busy street. As you do the exercises, you may want to take a little break, drink a glass of water or stop altogether if fatigue is a problem.
ALWAYS TAKE PRECAUTIONS TO AVOID STRAIN AND EXHAUSTION
IF IT HURTS OR SIMPLY DOES NOT FEEL RIGHT, STOP RIGHT AWAY
If you have any questions or concerns regarding these exercises or music therapy treatment, contact your therapist or the research assistant:
(Music therapist): phone#, email.
(Research assistant): phone#, email.
Step 1. POSTURE (2 min)
Firstly, let us work on body alignment. Proper body posture makes breathing, speaking and swallowing more effective.
To start, sit down comfortably and pay attention to the physical sensation of your body, any muscle tension, strain or stiffness. Then, gently move, stretch or self-massage for about one minute to release those.
Now find your proper body alignment. In doing so, let us move from the feet up.
Place both FEET on the ground, shoulder-width apart, forming the right angle with the thighs.
Adjust the PELVIS so there is slightly less curve in the lower back, and the spine feels extended both upwards and downwards.
Your RIB CAGE is now more upward and “open” (it is not collapsed).
Your SHOULDERS are suspended exactly over the rib cage (rather than pulled back or rolled forward).
Your HEAD is balanced at the top of the spine and feels almost weightless.
Your UPPER BODY is poised and aligned, yet flexible and ready to move (like a marionette suspended by a rope extending from the top of your head, or like the head of a water lily flower resting on the water surface).
Step 2. BREATH (2 min)
Maintaining body posture and flexibility, start diaphragmatic breathing.
JUST BREATHE. Breathe in through the nose, with the mouth slightly open, then breathe out through the mouth, without sound. The air enters and escapes from the lungs with no effort: it is not forced in any way, and no rib action should occur. You may place one hand on your abdomen and the other on the chest: feel your diaphragm working as your abdomen expands with each breath, while no visible movement of the chest or shoulders occurs. Repeat two more times.
EXHALE ON [S]. Now let us make sounds. Continue breathing in the same way, then, on the outbreath, make a continuous [s] sound until you run out of air. The sound should not be forced, and no rib action should occur. Repeat two more times.
EXHALE ON [A]. Let us continue. This time, as you breathe out, make an audible, very breathy sigh on a vowel sound (for example, [a]). The sound should not be forced, the throat should be relaxed, and no rib action should occur. Repeat two more times.
“BLOW ON THE FIRE”. And the last one. Breathe in through the nose, then breathe out very slowly through pursed lips (“as if blowing on the fire”). Repeat two more times.
Step 3. RELAXATION (10 min)
It is most beneficial to do these exercises to music. If possible, start the relaxation music provided to you by your music therapist in the background. Make sure you can hear the music well, but it is not too loud. Remember to maintain the aligned sitting posture and to breathe abdominally during this exercise. Be gentle rather than forceful when releasing muscle tension. Let us begin (Please note that the following narrative is for sample purposes only. It is important that the text is adjusted to individual preferences and physical capabilities of each patient).
Close your eyes and take a deep breath.
Concentrate on your breathing. Feel the air entering and leaving your body.
Feel the floor under your feet.
Feel the weight of your body. Let your hands become heavy.
Keep breathing deeply.
Move your shoulders slightly. Imagine standing under a beautiful, warm waterfall.
Water running down your shoulders, washing away all the tension, worries and fatigue, leaving you refreshed and balanced.
Feel the full length of your spine.
Take another breath. Feel the air filling up your lungs. Then let it go.
Now think of a space, real or imaginary, where you feel safe and content. It may be a beautiful forest with sunbeams coming through the green leaves, an open field full of wildflowers, an ocean shore with waves coming and going, or a quiet sunny room with a cozy chair.
Keep breathing. With each breath take in the energy of his place. Notice the colors, sounds, smells.
Stay in this place for several minutes.
Take this time for yourself.
While the music sounds, all the business and thoughts can wait. Let the music hold you.
(Enjoy 1 or 2 min of music).
It is time to go now. But as you leave this place, remember that you can return as often as you wish, whenever you need.
Take another deep breath. As you inhale, take in all the good, healing energy of this place. As you exhale, let go of the thoughts and sensations you do not need or want.
Feel your body. Feel the chair that supports you.
Feel your shoulders. Your arms.
Feel your feet on the floor. Let the floor surface supporting the weight of your feet.
Take another breath.
When you are ready, gently open your eyes.
It is time to start the muscle relaxation exercises.
HEAD. Let your head slowly fall forward under its weight, feel the stretch on the spine, and then bring the head back to the balanced position at the top of the spine. Repeat 2 or 3 times. You may also sway the head gently side to side during this exercise, if it feels appropriate.
FACE. Rub your hands together or warm them otherwise and place the palms over closed eyes for several seconds. Gently massage the face with circular motions of the pads of the fingers, using both hands, moving from hairline downwards to cheeks, lips and chin, spending more time on areas that feel tight. Let your jaw hang slack (“as if the only thing stopping your jaw from falling further was the skin on your face”). The face has to become void of any expression during this exercise.
TONGUE. Release your tongue muscles and let the tongue relax and fall forward slightly out of the mouth. Gently stretch the tongue out of the mouth down toward the chin, and release again allowing the tongue to rest on the lower lip. Then pull the tongue back into the mouth as far as possible, hold for a few seconds, and release. Make 2 or 3 repetitions.
JAW. Allow your jaw to drop without resistance. Take your jaw between the thumb and forefinger and gently move it up and down, at first slowly, then faster. The movement will be unrestricted if the jaw is relaxed. Now move the jaw as far forward as possible, hold, then release; then move the jaw as far back and upwards as possible (so that it looks like you have a “double chin”), hold, then release. Repeat this stretch two or three times, if it feels appropriate.
UNDER CHIN. Gently massage the muscles under your chin with your thumbs in slow, “kneading” motions, so that they go up and down. This movement should not be painful.
LARYNX. Place your fingers flat against the front of your neck and swallow: you can feel your larynx move. Now use your thumb and forefinger to gently move the larynx side to side several times.
Step 4. CONSONANTS (8 min)
As you start this set of exercises, remember to maintain the aligned posture and to practice diaphragmatic breathing.
YAWN. Pretend you are yawning with your mouth closed—or imagine there is a ping-pong ball in the back of your mouth. Feel a light stretch in your soft palate. Repeat three times.
“HAH”. Take an abdominal breath, expel about half of it, then add a light, “lazy” sigh (“hah”), starting in the middle of your voice range and going downwards. The tongue should rest in the limp position, the jaw should be relaxed. *Raise your arm and let it fall down to accompany the sound, as practiced in music therapy sessions, if this helps you. Do it twice.
“HAH-MAH-MAH-MAH-MAH”. Repeat the previous exercise, but at the beginning of the sigh allow the lips to close and open several times so that it sounds like “hah-mah-mah-mah-mah”. Remember not to press lips too firmly together.
CONSONANTS. Remember to keep your face and larynx muscles relaxed as you do this exercise. Take a deep diaphragmatic breath, then exhale making a continuous consonant sound. As before, start in the middle of your voice range and go downward. Repeat each consonant twice. Go in this order:
  • /V/
  • /Z/
  • /Z</
  • /L/
  • /R/
  • /J/
  • /M/
  • /N/
Remember to add a short vowel sound as you pronounce the following three consonants:
  • /B/
  • /D/
  • /G/
“MAN-NAH-NG-AH”. Take a deep diaphragmatic breath and slowly say “Mah-nahng-ah” in cantillation once as you breathe out. Take another breath and say “mahnah-ng-ah” 3 times in a row, on the next breath—6 times, on the next breath—9 times, and, finally, try to say it 12 times on one exhalation. Note how freely you move your tongue and jaw as you do this exercise.
“HUN-GA”. Now check your posture and make sure the muscles of your jaw, neck and shoulders are relaxed. Practice saying “hun-ga”. Feel the air coming through your nose on the first syllable and through your mouth on the second syllable. As you sing along the track provided to you by your music therapist, remember to breathe with your diaphragm and to not force the sound.
Step 5. IMPULSE BREATHING (2 min)
SHORT “HAH”. For this exercise you will need to fully relax abdominal muscles and let the air effortlessly enter your lungs, then to abruptly expel the air with a short, though deep and strong (“barking”) “hah” sound and then to immediately let the abdominal muscles relax again, letting the air back into the lungs. On the recording provided to you by your music therapist, listen to the metronome for 8 beats, then do 8 exhales on “hah” for the next 8 beats, then rest for 8 more beats, after which do 8more exhalations on “hah” to the beat.
LONG “HAAAAH”. As in the previous exercise, fully relax the abdominal muscles and let the air effortlessly enter the lungs. Then pronounce two short and one long syllable: “Hah-hah-haaaaaaaah”. After each of the three syllables, the abdominal muscles should quickly relax again, letting the air into the lungs. /A/ sound should be very open and deep, but not forced. Repeat two more times.
Step 6. VOWELS (6 min)
VOWEL SHAPES. With the mouth fully closed, silently, form vowel shapes in the following sequence: /A/—/E/—/I/—/O/—/U/. Pay attention to position changes in tongue and facial muscles. Repeat the sequence two more times.
SUSTAINED VOWELS. Check your posture and make sure that muscles of your face, neck and shoulders are not strained. Remember to take deep diaphragmatic breath for each syllable you sing. As you sing along the track provided to you by your music therapist, sustain the syllable «MAH» for four measures, and when you hear a brief stop in the guitar accompaniment, stop and take another deep breath. Repeat the exercise for syllables “MEH”, “MEE”, “MOH”, “MOO”.
GLIDING VOWELS. In this exercise you will sing along the music track again. Starting on “MAH”, slide up a major third interval as your music therapist models for you on the recording. Sustain this tone till the end of the measure or till you run out of air. The sound does not have to be loud. Repeat the slide three more times on “MAH”, as the harmony changes.
Continue with four slides on “MEE” and four slides on “MOO”. If it feels good and your voice is not tired, you can repeat the whole exercise making a larger (perfect fifth) slide, as demonstrated on the recording by your music therapist.
When you are finished with your daily exercises, rest for several minutes and drink enough water to keep hydrated.
Remember to keep record of the days when you do your exercises. Try to notice how these exercises make you feel afterwards. Take a mental note on any difficulties, successes or changes. You will have the opportunity to discuss your daily exercise routine with your therapist during your next session.
Remember to always follow the Vocal health guidelines provided to you by your music therapist.

Appendix D. Numerical Rating Scale for Current Perceived Ease of Respiration (English Translation)

How easy is it to breathe for you now?
Please indicate on the scale from 1 (very difficult) to 10 (very easy).
Brainsci 12 00494 i009

Appendix E. Numerical Rating Scale for Current Perceived Ease of Speech (English Translation)

How easy is it to speak for you now?
Please indicate on the scale from 1 (very difficult) to 10 (very easy).
Brainsci 12 00494 i010

Appendix F. Interviews with Research Participants—Persons with ALS, Conducted Prior to Treatment (Week 5) (English Translation)

  • Question 1. How, you think, may music therapy affect your speech, breathing and swallowing?
  • Question 2. How, you think, may music therapy affect you otherwise?
  • Question 3. What do you expect in music therapy sessions?
  • Question 4. How, you think, will it be to independently do the assigned music therapy exercises between the sessions?
  • Question 5. How, you think, may these music therapy exercises affect your speech, breathing and swallowing?
  • Question 6. Other comments.

Appendix G. Interviews with Research Participants—Persons with ALS, Conducted at the End of the Follow-Up Period (Week 16) (English Translation)

  • Question 1. Has music therapy affected your speech, breathing and swallowing? In which way?
  • Question 2. Has music therapy affected you otherwise?
  • Question 3. How did it feel to participate in music therapy sessions?
  • Question 4. How was it to independently do the assigned music therapy exercises between the sessions?
  • Question 5. Have these music therapy exercises affected your speech, breathing and swallowing?
  • Question 6. Other comments.

Appendix H. Interviews with Research Participants—Caregivers of Persons with ALS, Conducted Prior to Treatment (Week 5) (English Translation)

  • Question 1. How, you think, may music therapy affect speech, breathing and swallowing of X (person with ALS)?
  • Question 2. How, you think, may music therapy affect X (person with ALS) otherwise?
  • Question 3. How, you think, X’s engagement in music therapy may affect you as a primary caregiver?

Appendix I. Interviews with Research Participants—Caregivers of Persons with ALS, Conducted at the End of the Follow-Up Period (Week 16) (English Translation)

  • Question 1. Has music therapy affected X’s (person with ALS) speech, breathing and swallowing?
  • Question 2. Has music therapy affected X (person with ALS) otherwise?
  • Question 3. Has X’s (person with ALS) engagement in music therapy affected you as a primary caregiver?
  • Question 4. Other comments.

Appendix J. Text for Oral Reading Task (Russian)

The excerpt marked in bold was recorded as a voice sample for acoustic analysis.
Дoм, в кoтoрoм я живу, распoлoжен на oкраине маленькoгo гoрoдка, у самoй пoдoшвы гoры. Здесь мягкий климат и редкo идут дoжди. Нoчью небoсвoд бывает так густo усеян звездами, чтo кажется, будтo все миллиарды их из нашей галактики разбрoсаны вверху над мoей гoлoвoй. Летним утрoм, как тoлькo я oткрываю oкнo, мoя бoльшая кoмната напoлняется запахoм цветoв. Ветки черешен смoтрят мне в oкна, и легкий теплый ветер усыпает мoй письменный стoл белыми лепестками.
Я слушаю щебет птиц. Вoт с искрoметным задoрoм прoпел зяблик. Где-тo дятел устраивает дуплo. А этo черные дрoзды—пoют не хуже сoлoвьев. Прямo передo мнoй внизу—пестрый узoр из крыш гoрoдских дoмoв, а вдалеке, на краю гoризoнта, тянется серебряная цепь снегoвых вершин... Веселo жить в такoй земле! Отраднoе чувствo разливается в жилах: вoкруг величественные гoры, вoздух чистый и свежий, сoлнце яркoе, небo синее—чегo еще желать?.. Бьют настенные часы над каминoм: пять, шесть, семь, вoсемь, девять... Нужнo тoрoпиться в бюрo. Минуты две-три ищу в шкафу электрическую схему, привезенную французским кoллегoй. Накoнец заглядываю в пoртфель, нахoжу ее внутри и вкладываю в книгу. Пoсле этoгo плoтнo закрываю жалюзи, oднакo сквoзь щелки все равнo прoбивается сoлнечный свет. Выхoжу на крыльцo и запираю ключoм дверь. Спустившись ниже к центру гoрoда, иду бульварoм. Часть дoрoги прoхoдит пo пешехoднoму мoсту через реку. Гибкие стальные трoсы держат невысoкий мoст. Они привязаны к специальным тяжелым якoрям, врытым в землю. Останавливаюсь в начале мoстика у oграды, чтoбы пoлюбoваться рельефными склoнами гoрных хребтoв, всматриваюсь в речную рябь. Пoд мoстoм с шумoм плещутся мелкие рыбешки, вoзмущая вoдную гладь. Откуда-тo дoнoсится музыка: нoктюрн Шoпена—пoзывные местнoй радиoстанции.
Вдруг пoзади себя я слышу: „Сережа, неужели этo ты? Вoт так встреча!“. Я узнаю этoт низкий гoлoс. Обoрачиваюсь—так и есть: Андрей Сафoнoв!
Очень радoстнo видеть егo внoвь. С Андреем мы знакoмы с кoнца вoсьмидесятых—служили вместе в армии. Егo, энергичнoгo и oбщительнoгo, всегда на пoмoщь гoтoвoгo прийти, любили все. Меня пoкoрили егo честнoсть и недюжинная сила. Мы были дружны, нo пoтoм, малo-пoмалу, связь наша oбoрвалась.
—Здравствуй, Андрюша! Как ты тут oказался? —Кoмандирoвка в архив: предлагают снять сюжет прo судoверфь. Вчера приехали—сегoдня уезжаем. Вернее, улетаем—к четырем в аэрoпoрт. —Так скoрo? И куда? —Следующим пунктoм Уфа. Прямoй рейс. А ты, значит, теперь здесь живешь? Давнo? —Два гoда будет в феврале. Обменял свoю гoрoдскую квартиру на бревенчатую избу. —Серьезнo? Не жалеешь? В глазах мoегo приятеля мелькнул веселый oгoнек. —Нискoлькo. Отдыхаю oт килoметрoвых прoбoк, сутoлoки и пыли. —Пo-прежнему плывешь прoтив течения? Счастливый ты челoвек, Сергей. —Ладнo, расскажи лучше o себе. Мы тысячу лет не виделись. Как жизнь? Как семья? —Все у нас хoрoшo, все здoрoвы. Мы с женoй рабoтаем, дoчь гимназию заканчивает. —Ну а Федoр как? Учится? —Он в этoм гoду пoступил в медицинский.—Какoй мoлoдец! Пoздравляю вас! —Спасибo. —Кстати, ты пoзавтракал? —Немнoгo кoфе выпил в гoстинице.
С удoвoльствием бы съел чтo-нибудь. —Недалекo oтсюда есть кафе. Мы привыкли там есть. Пoйдем, прoвoжу тебя. Впoлне приличный сервис, разнooбразнoе меню. Однo из их „фирменных“ блюд—рыба пo-бенгальски. Рекoмендую: вкус неoбыкнoвенный—для настoящих гурманoв. —Звучит слишкoм изысканнo. Пoпрoще ничегo нет? —Как насчет яичницы с грибами? —В самый раз. А ты тoрoпишься? Мoжет быть, сoставишь мне кoмпанию? За разгoвoрами и вoспoминаниями незаметнo прoлетел завтрак. Приближалoсь время сказать „дo свидания“. Мы расстались в твердoм намерении бoльше не терять друг друга из виду.
Source: [126] (pp. 6–10)

References

  1. Marin, B.; Boumédiene, F.; Logroscino, G.; Couratier, P.; Babron, M.-C.; Leutenegger, A.-L.; Copetti, M.; Preux, P.-M.; Beghi, E. Variation in worldwide incidence of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: A meta-analysis. Int. J. Epidemiol. 2017, 46, 57–74. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  2. Longinetti, E.; Fang, F. Epidemiology of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: An update of recent literature. Curr. Opin. Neurol. 2019, 32, 771–776. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  3. Qureshi, M.M.; Hayden, D.; Urbinelli, L.; Ferrante, K.; Newhall, K.; Myers, D.; Hilgenberg, S.; Smart, R.; Brown, R.H.; Cudkowicz, M.E. Analysis of factors that modify susceptibility and rate of progression in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Amyotroph. Lateral Scler. 2006, 7, 173–182. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  4. Patel, B.P.; Hamadeh, M.J. Nutritional and exercise-based interventions in the treatment of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Clin. Nutr. 2009, 28, 604–617. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  5. Plowman, E.K. Is there a role for exercise in the management of bulbar dysfunction in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis? J. Speech Lang. Hear. Res. 2015, 58, 1151–1166. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  6. Hecht, M. Subjective experience and coping in ALS. Amyotroph. Lateral Scler. Mot. Neuron Disord. 2002, 3, 225. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  7. Paris, G.; Martinaud, O.; Petit, A.; Cuvelier, A.; Hannequin, D.; Roppeneck, P.; Verin, E. Oropharyngeal dysphagia in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis alters quality of life. J. Oral Rehabil. 2013, 40, 199–204. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  8. Chiò, A.; Logroscino, G.; Hardiman, O.; Swingler, R.; Mitchell, D.; Beghi, E.; Traynor, B.G.; Eurals Consortium. Prognostic factors in ALS: A critical review. Amyotroph. Lateral Scler. 2009, 10, 310–323. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  9. Desport, J.C.; Preux, P.M.; Truong, T.C.; Vallat, J.M.; Sautereau, D.; Couratier, P. Nutritional status is a prognostic factor for survival in ALS patients. Neurology 1999, 53, 1059–1063. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  10. Yang, R.; Huang, R.; Chen, D.; Song, W.; Zeng, Y.; Zhao, B.; Zhou, N.; Shang, H.-F. Causes and places of death of patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis in south-west China. Amyotroph. Lateral Scler. 2011, 12, 206–209. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  11. Corcia, P.; Pradat, P.; Salachas, F.; Bruneteau, G.; Le Forestier, N.; Seilhean, D.; Hauw, J.; Meininger, V. Causes of death in a post-mortem series of ALS patients. Amyotroph. Lateral Scler. 2008, 9, 59–62. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  12. Czaplinski, A.; Yen, A.A.; Appel, S.H. Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: Early predictors of prolonged survival. J. Neurol. 2006, 253, 1428–1436. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  13. Hanson, K.; Yorkston, K.; Britton, D. Dysarthria in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: A systematic review of characteristics, speech treatment, and augmentative and alternative communication options. J. Med. Speech-Lang. Pathol. 2011, 19, 12. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  14. Green, J.; Yunusova, Y.; Kuruvilla-Dugdale, M.; Wang, J.; Pattee, G.L.; Synhorst, L.; Zinman, L.; Berry, J.D. Bulbar and speech motor assessment in ALS: Challenges and future directions. Amyotroph. Lateral Scler. Front. Degener. 2013, 14, 494–500. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  15. Kaub-Wittemer, D.; von Steinbüchel, N.; Wasner, M.; Laier-Groeneveld, G.; Borasio, G.D. Quality of life and psychosocial issues in ventilated patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and their caregivers. J. Pain Symptom Manag. 2003, 26, 890–896. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  16. Miller, R.G.; Jackson, C.E.; Kasarskis, E.J.; England, J.D.; Forshew, D.; Johnston, W.; Kalra, S.; Katz, J.S.; Mitsumoto, H.; Rosenfeld, J.; et al. Practice parameter update: The care of the patient with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: Multidisciplinary care, symptom management, and cognitive/behavioral impairment (an evidence-based review): Report of the Quality Standards Subcommittee of the American Academy of Neurology. Neurology 2009, 73, 1227–1233. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  17. Wolf, J.; Safer, A.; Wöhrle, J.C.; Palm, F.; Nix, W.A.; Maschke, M.; Grau, A.J. Todesursachen bei amyotropher Lateralsklerose; Ergebnisse aus dem ALS-Register Rheinland-Pfalz (Causes of death in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; Results from the Rhineland-Palatinate ALS registry). Nervenarzt 2017, 88, 911–918. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  18. Phukan, J.; Elamin, M.; Bede, P.; Jordan, N.; Gallagher, L.; Byrne, S.; Lynch, C.; Pender, N.; Hardiman, O. The syndrome of cognitive impairment in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: A population-based study. J. Neurol. Neurosurg. Psychiatry 2012, 83, 102–108. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  19. Hardiman, O.; Figlewicz, D.A. The expansions of ALS. Neurology 2012, 79, 842–843. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  20. Ng, A.S.; Rademakers, R.; Miller, B.L. Frontotemporal dementia: A bridge between dementia and neuromuscular disease. Ann. N. Y. Acad. Sci. 2015, 1338, 71–93. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  21. Thakore, N.J.; Pioro, E.P. Depression in ALS in a large self-reporting cohort. Neurology 2016, 86, 1031–1038. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  22. Vignola, A.; Guzzo, A.; Calvo, A.; Moglia, C.; Pessia, A.; Cavallo, E.; Cammarosano, S.; Giacone, S.; Ghiglione, P.; Chiò, A. Anxiety undermines quality of life in ALS patients and caregivers. Eur. J. Neurol. 2008, 15, 1231–1236. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  23. Kurt, A.; Nijboer, F.; Matuz, T.; Kübler, A. Depression and anxiety in individuals with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: Epidemiology and management. CNS Drugs 2007, 21, 279–291. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  24. Galvin, M.; Corr, B.; Madden, C.; Mays, I.; McQuillan, R.; Timonen, V.; Staines, A.; Hardiman, O. Caregiving in ALS—A mixed methods approach to the study of burden. BMC Palliat. Care 2016, 15, 81. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  25. Aoun, S.M.; Bentley, B.; Funk, L.; Toye, C.; Grande, G.; Stajduhar, K. A 10-year literature review of family caregiving for motor neurone disease: Moving from caregiver burden studies to palliative care interventions. Palliat. Med. 2013, 27, 437–446. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  26. Qutub, K.; Lacomis, D.; Albert, S.M.; Feingold, E. Life factors affecting depression and burden in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis caregivers. Amyotroph. Lateral Scler. Front. Degener. 2014, 15, 292–297. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  27. Williams, M.T.; Donnelly, J.P.; Holmlund, T.; Battaglia, M. ALS: Family caregiver needs and quality of life. Amyotroph. Lateral Scler. 2008, 9, 279–286. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  28. Fang, T.; Al Khleifat, A.; Meurgey, J.-H.; Jones, A.; Leigh, P.N.; Bensimon, G.; Al-Chalabi, A. Stage at which riluzole treatment prolongs survival in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: A retrospective analysis of data from a dose-ranging study. Lancet Neurol. 2018, 17, 416–422. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  29. Knibb, J.A.; Keren, N.; Kulka, A.; Leigh, P.N.; Martin, S.; Shaw, C.E.; Tsuda, M.; Al-Chalabi, A. A clinical tool for predicting survival in ALS. J. Neurol. Neurosurg. Psychiatry 2016, 87, 1361–1367. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  30. Sinaki, M.; Mulder, D.W. Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: Relationship between serum creatine kinase level and patient survival. Arch. Phys. Med. Rehabil. 1986, 67, 169–171. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  31. Bello-Haas, V.D.; Florence, J.M.; Kloos, A.D.; Scheirbecker, J.; Lopate, G.; Hayes, S.M.; Pioro, E.P.; Mitsumoto, H. A randomized controlled trial of resistance exercise in individuals with ALS. Neurology 2007, 68, 2003–2007. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  32. Drory, V.E.; Goltsman, E.; Reznik, J.; Mosek, A.; Korczyn, A. The value of muscle exercise in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. J. Neurol. Sci. 2001, 191, 133–137. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  33. Lisle, S.; Tennison, M. Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: The role of exercise. Curr. Sports Med. Rep. 2015, 14, 45–46. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  34. Pinto, A.C.; Alves, M.; Nogueira, A.; Evangelista, T.; Carvalho, J.; Coelho, A.; de Carvalho, M.; Sales-Luís, M.L. Can amyotrophic lateral sclerosis patients with respiratory insufficiency exercise? J. Neurol. Sci. 1999, 169, 69–75. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  35. Chen, A.; Montes, J.; Mitsumoto, H. The role of exercise in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Phys. Med. Rehabil. Clin. N. Am. 2008, 19, 545–557. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  36. De Almeida, J.P.L.; Silvestre, R.; Pinto, A.C.; De Carvalho, M. Exercise and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Neurol. Sci. 2012, 33, 9–15. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  37. Bello-Haas, V.D.; Florence, J.M. Therapeutic exercise for people with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis or motor neuron disease. Cochrane Database Syst. Rev. 2013, 2013, CD005229. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  38. Kitano, K.; Asakawa, T.; Kamide, N.; Yorimoto, K.; Yoneda, M.; Kikuchi, Y.; Sawada, M.; Komori, T. Effectiveness of home-based exercises without supervision by physical therapists for patients with early-stage amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: A pilot study. Arch. Phys. Med. Rehabil. 2018, 99, 2114–2117. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  39. Lunetta, C.; Lizio, A.; Sansone, V.A.; Cellotto, N.M.; Maestri, E.; Bettinelli, M.; Gatti, V.; Melazzini, M.G.; Meola, G.; Corbo, M. Strictly monitored exercise programs reduce motor deterioration in ALS: Preliminary results of a randomized controlled trial. J. Neurol. 2016, 263, 52–60. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  40. Pinto, S.; Swash, M.; de Carvalho, M. Respiratory exercise in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Amyotroph. Lateral Scler. 2012, 13, 33–43. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  41. Plowman, E.K.; Watts, S.A.; Tabor, L.; Robison, R.; Gaziano, J.; Domer, A.S.; Richter, J.; Vu, T.; Gooch, C. Impact of expiratory strength training in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Muscle Nerve 2016, 54, 48–53. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  42. Tabor, L.C.; Rosado, K.M.; Robison, R.; Hegland, K.; Humbert, I.A.; Plowman, E.K. Respiratory training in an individual with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Ann. Clin. Transl. Neurol. 2016, 3, 819–823. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  43. Paganoni, S.; Karam, C.; Joyce, N.; Bedlack, R.; Carter, G.T. Comprehensive rehabilitative care across the spectrum of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. NeuroRehabilitation 2015, 37, 53–68. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  44. Davis, W.B.; Gfeller, K.E.; Thaut, M.H. An Introduction to Music Therapy: Theory and Practice, 3rd ed.; American Music Therapy Association: Silver Spring, MD, USA, 2008; Volume 18, 573p. [Google Scholar]
  45. Hanser, S.B. The New Music Therapist’s Handbook, 3rd ed.; Berklee Press Publications: Boston, MA, USA, 2018. [Google Scholar]
  46. Bonde, L.O.; Wigram, T. A Comprehensive Guide to Music Therapy: Theory, Clinical Practice, Research and Training; Jessica Kingsley Publishers: London, UK, 2002. [Google Scholar]
  47. Wheeler, B.L. Music Therapy Handbook. Creative Arts and Play Therapy; The Guilford Press: New York, NY, USA; London, UK, 2015; Volume 19, 507p. [Google Scholar]
  48. Magee, W.L. Why include music therapy in a neuro-rehabilitation team? Adv. Clin. Neurosci. Rehabil. 2020, 19, 10–12. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  49. Koelsch, S. Brain correlates of music-evoked emotions. Nat. Rev. Neurosci. 2014, 15, 170–180. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  50. Peretz, I.; Zatorre, R.J. Brain organization for music processing. Annu. Rev. Psychol. 2005, 56, 89–114. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  51. Thaut, M.H.; McIntosh, G.C.; Ehoemberg, V. Neurobiological foundations of neurologic music therapy: Rhythmic entrainment and the motor system. Front. Psychol. 2015, 5, 1185. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  52. Zatorre, R.J.; Chen, J.L.; Penhune, V.B. When the brain plays music: Auditory–motor interactions in music perception and production. Nat. Rev. Neurosci. 2007, 8, 547–558. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  53. Thaut, M.; Hoemberg, V. Handbook of Neurologic Music Therapy; Oxford University Press: Oxford, UK, 2016. [Google Scholar]
  54. Horne-Thompson, A.; Grocke, D. The effect of music therapy on anxiety in patients who are terminally ill. J. Palliat. Med. 2008, 11, 582. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  55. Tsitkanou, S.; Della Gatta, P.; Foletta, V.; Russell, A. The role of exercise as a non-pharmacological therapeutic approach for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: Beneficial or detrimental? Front. Neurol. 2019, 10, 783. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  56. Bonafede, R.; Mariotti, R. ALS pathogenesis and therapeutic approaches: The role of mesenchymal stem cells and extracellular vesicles. Front. Cell. Neurosci. 2017, 11, 80. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  57. Byock, I. Dying Well: Peace and Possibilities at the End of Life; Riverhead Books: New York, NY, USA, 1999. [Google Scholar]
  58. Petering, H.; McLean, J. An interdisciplinary approach of music therapy and nursing in the care of people with motor neurone disease. In Proceedings of the 2001 6th Australian Palliative Care Conference: “Palliative Care—Learning to Live”, Hobart, Australia, 10–12 September 2001. [Google Scholar]
  59. Lings, J. From “can’t” to “can”: An exploration of the experience of improvisation with a client with Motor Neurone Disease Counterpoints: Music therapy practice in the 21st century. In Proceedings of the First BAMT Conference, Birmingham, UK, 21–23 February 2014. [Google Scholar]
  60. Forrest, L. Using music therapy in the symptom management of patients with Motor Neurone Disease. In Proceedings of the 10th World Congress on Music Therapy, Oxford, UK, 24 July 2002. [Google Scholar]
  61. Kondo, K. Music therapy for patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis receiving home mechanical ventilation. J. Neurol. Sci. 2017, 381, 562–563. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  62. Schmid, W. MusicALS: Home-based music therapy for individuals with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and their caring families. Nord J. Music Ther. 2016, 25, 66. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  63. Raglio, A.; Giovanazzi, E.; Pain, D.; Baiardi, P.; Imbriani, C.; Imbriani, M.; Mora, G. Active music therapy approach in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: A randomized-controlled trial. Int. J. Rehabil. Res. 2016, 39, 365–367. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  64. Davies, R.; Baker, F.A.; Tamplin, J.; Bajo, E.; Bolger, K.; Sheers, N.; Berlowitz, D. Music-assisted relaxation during transition to non-invasive ventilation in people with motor neuron disease: A qualitative case series. Br. J. Music Ther. 2016, 30, 74–82. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  65. Matsuo, K.; Palmer, J.B. Anatomy and physiology of feeding and swallowing: Normal and abnormal. Phys. Med. Rehabil. Clin. N. Am. 2008, 19, 691–707. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  66. Bukowska, A.A.; Krężałek, P.; Mirek, E.; Bujas, P.; Marchewka, A. Neurologic music therapy training for mobility and stability rehabilitation with Parkinson’s disease—A pilot study. Front. Hum. Neurosci. 2016, 9, 710. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  67. Gregory, D. Music listening for maintaining attention of older adults with cognitive impairments. J. Music Ther. 2002, 39, 244–264. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  68. Kim, S.J. Music therapy protocol development to enhance swallowing training for stroke patients with dysphagia. J. Music Ther. 2010, 47, 102–119. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  69. Särkämö, T.; Tervaniemi, M.; Laitinen, S.; Forsblom, A.; Soinila, S.; Mikkonen, M.; Autti, T.; Silvennoinen, H.M.; Erkkilä, J.; Laine, M.; et al. Music listening enhances cognitive recovery and mood after middle cerebral artery stroke. Brain 2008, 131, 866–876. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  70. Tamplin, J. A pilot study into the effect of vocal exercises and singing on dysarthric speech. NeuroRehabilitation 2008, 23, 207–216. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  71. Lillo, P.; Mioshi, E.; Hodges, J.R. Caregiver burden in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis is more dependent on patients’ behavioral changes than physical disability: A comparative study. BMC Neurol. 2012, 12, 156. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  72. Ong, M.-L.; Tan, P.F.; Holbrook, J.D. Predicting functional decline and survival in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. PLoS ONE 2017, 12, e0174925. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  73. Wheeler, B.L.; Murphy, K.M. Music Therapy Research, 3rd ed.; Barcelona Publishers: Dallas, TX, USA, 2016. [Google Scholar]
  74. Brylev, L.; Ataulina, A.; Fominykh, V.; Parshikov, V.; Vorobyeva, A.; Istomina, E.; Shikhirimov, R.; Salikov, A.; Zakharova, M.; Guekht, A.; et al. The epidemiology of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis in Moscow (Russia). Amyotroph. Lateral Scler. Front. Degener. 2020, 21, 410–415. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  75. Brooks, B.R.; Miller, R.G.; Swash, M.; Munsat, T.L. El Escorial revisited: Revised criteria for the diagnosis of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Amyotroph. Lateral Scler. Motor Neuron Disord. 2000, 1, 293–299. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  76. Rooney, J.; Burke, T.; Vajda, A.; Heverin, M.; Hardiman, O. What does the ALSFRS-R really measure? A longitudinal and survival analysis of functional dimension subscores in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. J. Neurol. Neurosurg. Psychiatry 2017, 88, 381–386. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  77. Chernenkaya, V.Y.; Gorbachev, K.V.; Gorbachev, D.V.; Ataulina, A.I.; Fominykh, V.V.; Brylev, L.V.; Guekht, A.B. The Edinburgh Cognitive and Behavioral ALS Screen (ECAS): A Russian version. Zh. Nevrol. Psikhiatr. Im. S. S. Korsakova 2018, 118, 36–39. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  78. Abrahams, S.; Newton, J.; Niven, E.; Foley, J.; Bak, T.H. Screening for cognition and behaviour changes in ALS. Amyotroph. Lateral Scler. Front. Degener. 2014, 15, 9–14. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  79. Roman, A. Suggestions and Information about Speech Changes and Augmentative Alternative Communication (AAC). 2014. Available online: http://www.alsa.org/als-care/resources/publications-videos/factsheets/slurred-speech.html (accessed on 13 October 2019).
  80. Ashworth, N.L.; Satkunam, L.E.; Deforge, D. Treatment for spasticity in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis/motor neuron disease. Cochrane Database Syst. Rev. 2012, 15, CD004156. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  81. Baker, F.; Wigram, T.; Gold, C. The effects of a song-singing programme on the affective speaking intonation of people with traumatic brain injury. Brain Inj. 2005, 19, 519–528. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  82. Chiao, G.; Larson, C.; Yajima, Y.; Ko, P.; Kahrilas, P. Neuronal activity in nucleus ambiguus during deglutition and vocalization in conscious monkeys. Exp. Brain Res. 1994, 100, 29–38. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  83. Cohen, N.S. The effect of singing instruction on the speech production of neurologically impaired persons. J. Music Ther. 1992, 29, 87–103. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  84. Matsuo, K.; Palmer, J.B. Coordination of mastication, swallowing and breathing. Jpn. Dent. Sci. Rev. 2009, 45, 31–40. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  85. Palovcak, M.; Mancinelli, J.M.; Elman, L.B.; McCluskey, L. Diagnostic and therapeutic methods in the management of dysphagia in the ALS population: Issues in efficacy for the out-patient setting. NeuroRehabilitation 2007, 22, 417–423. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  86. Rong, P.; Yunusova, Y.; Wang, J.; Zinman, L.; Pattee, G.L.; Berry, J.D.; Perry, B.; Green, J.R. Predicting speech intelligibility decline in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis based on the deterioration of individual speech subsystems. PLoS ONE 2016, 11, e0154971. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  87. Haneishi, E. Effects of a music therapy voice protocol on speech intelligibility, vocal acoustic measures, and mood of individuals with Parkinson’s disease. J. Music Ther. 2001, 38, 273–290. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  88. Tamplin, J.; Grocke, D. A music therapy treatment protocol for acquired dysarthria rehabilitation. Music Ther. Perspect. 2008, 26, 23–29. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  89. Wiens, M.E.; Reimer, M.A.; Guyn, L.H. Music therapy as a treatment method for improving respiratory muscle strength in patients with advanced multiple sclerosis: A pilot study. Rehabil. Nurs. 1999, 24, 74–80. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  90. Lyle, H. Vocal Yoga: The Joy of Breathing, Singing and Sounding; Bluecat Music and Publishing: Palisades, CA, USA, 2014. [Google Scholar]
  91. Ramig, L.A.; Titze, I.R.; Scherer, R.C.; Ringel, S.P. Acoustic analysis of voices of patients with neurologic disease: Rationale and preliminary data. Ann. Otol. Rhinol. Laryngol. 1988, 97, 164–172. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  92. Peckham, A. The Contemporary Singer: Elements of Vocal Technique; Berklee Press Publications: Boston, MA, USA, 2010. [Google Scholar]
  93. McClosky, D.B. Your Voice at Its Best; Waveland Press Inc.: Long Grove, IL, USA, 2011. [Google Scholar]
  94. Welham, N.V.; Maclagan, M.A. Vocal fatigue: Current knowledge and future directions. J. Voice 2003, 17, 21–30. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  95. Woo, A.S. Velopharyngeal dysfunction. Semin. Plast. Surg. 2012, 26, 170–177. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  96. Walters, S.J.; Henriques-Cadby, I.B.D.A.; Bortolami, O.; Flight, L.; Hind, D.; Jacques, R.M.; Knox, C.; Nadin, B.; Rothwell, J.; Surtees, M.; et al. Recruitment and retention of participants in randomised controlled trials: A review of trials funded and published by the United Kingdom Health Technology Assessment Programme. BMJ Open 2017, 7, e015276. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  97. Atassi, N.; Yerramilli-Rao, P.; Szymonifka, J.; Yu, H.; Kearney, M.; Grasso, D.; Deng, J.; Levine-Weinberg, M.; Shapiro, J.; Lee, A.; et al. Analysis of start-up, retention, and adherence in ALS clinical trials. Neurology 2013, 81, 1350–1355. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  98. Fernandez-Lazaro, C.I.; García-González, J.M.; Adams, D.P.; Fernandez-Lazaro, D.; Mielgo-Ayuso, J.; Caballero-Garcia, A.; Racionero, F.M.; Córdova, A.; Miron-Canelo, J.A. Adherence to treatment and related factors among patients with chronic conditions in primary care: A cross-sectional study. BMC Fam. Pr. 2019, 20, 132. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  99. Shiovitz, T.M.; Bain, E.E.; McCann, D.J.; Skolnick, P.; Laughren, T.; Hanina, A.; Burch, D. Mitigating the effects of nonadherence in clinical trials. J. Clin. Pharmacol. 2016, 56, 1151–1164. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  100. Braun, V.; Clarke, V. Using thematic analysis in psychology. Qual. Res. Psychol. 2006, 3, 77–101. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  101. Riessman, C.K. Narrative Methods for the Human Sciences; Sage Publications Inc.: Thousand Oaks, CA, USA, 2008. [Google Scholar]
  102. Jensen, L.; Djurtoft, J.B.; Bech, R.D.; Nielsen, J.L.; Jørgensen, L.H.; Schrøder, H.D.; Frandsen, U.; Aagaard, P.; Hvid, L.G. Influence of resistance training on neuromuscular function and physical capacity in ALS patients. J. Neurodegener. Dis. 2017, 2017, 1436519. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  103. Plowman, E.K.; Tabor, L.C.; Wymer, J.; Pattee, G. The evaluation of bulbar dysfunction in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: Survey of clinical practice patterns in the United States. Amyotroph. Lateral Scler. Front. Degener. 2017, 18, 351–357. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  104. Smith, R.; Pioro, E.; Myers, K.; Sirdofsky, M.; Goslin, K.; Meekins, G.; Yu, H.; Wymer, J.; Cudkowicz, M.; Macklin, E.A.; et al. Enhanced bulbar function in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: The Nuedexta Treatment Trial. Neurotherapeutics 2017, 14, 762–772. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  105. Pinto, S.; De Carvalho, M. The R of ALSFRS-R: Does it really mirror functional respiratory involvement in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis? Amyotroph. Lateral Scler. Front. Degener. 2015, 16, 120–123. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  106. Gwathmey, K.G.; Berggren, K.N. Reflections on the implementation of the provisional best practices guidelines for the evaluation of bulbar dysfunction in ALS. Muscle Nerve 2019, 59, 531–536. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  107. Andersen, P.M.; Borasio, G.D.; Dengler, R.; Hardiman, O.; Kollewe, K.; Leigh, P.N.; Pradat, P.-F.; Silani, V.; Tomik, B. EFNS task force on management of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: Guidelines for diagnosing and clinical care of patients and relatives. An evidence-based review with good practice points. Eur. J. Neurol. 2005, 12, 921–938. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  108. Beukelman, D.; Fager, S.; Nordness, A. Communication support for people with ALS. Neurol. Res. Int. 2011, 2011, 714693. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  109. Bowen, L.K.; Hands, G.L.; Pradhan, S.; Stepp, C.E. Effects of Parkinson’s disease on fundamental frequency variability in running speech. J. Med. Speech-Lang. Pathol. 2013, 21, 235–244. [Google Scholar]
  110. Brédart, A.; Marrel, A.; Abetz-Webb, L.; Lasch, K.; Acquadro, C. Interviewing to develop Patient-Reported Outcome (PRO) measures for clinical research: Eliciting patients’ experience. Health Qual. Life Outcomes 2014, 12, 15. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  111. Czaplinski, A.; Yen, A.A.; Appel, S.H. Forced Vital Capacity (FVC) as an indicator of survival and disease progression in an ALS clinic population. J. Neurol. Neurosurg. Psychiatry 2005, 77, 390–392. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  112. Donovan, N.J.; Kendall, D.L.; Young, M.E.; Rosenbek, J.C. The communicative effectiveness survey: Preliminary evidence of construct validity. Am. J. Speech-Lang. Pathol. 2008, 17, 335–347. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  113. Lee, J.; Littlejohn, M.A.; Simmons, Z. Acoustic and tongue kinematic vowel space in speakers with and without dysarthria. Int. J. Speech-Lang. Pathol. 2017, 19, 195–205. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  114. McCullough, G.H.; Kamarunas, E.; Mann, G.C.; Schmidley, J.W.; Robbins, J.A.; Crary, M.A. Effects of Mendelsohn maneuver on measures of swallowing duration post stroke. Top. Stroke Rehabil. 2012, 19, 234–243. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  115. Mefferd, A.S.; Green, J.R.; Pattee, G. A novel fixed-target task to determine articulatory speed constraints in persons with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. J. Commun. Disord. 2012, 45, 35–45. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  116. Mendelsohn, M.S.; Mcconnel, F.M.S. Function in the pharyngoesophageal segment. Laryngoscope 1987, 97, 489. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  117. Nishio, S.N.M. Changes over time in dysarthric patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS): A study of changes in speaking rate and maximum repetition rate (MRR). Clin. Linguist. Phon. 2000, 14, 485–497. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  118. Pietkiewicz, I.; Smith, J.A. A practical guide to using interpretative phenomenological analysis in qualitative research psychology. Psychol. J. 2014, 20, 7–14. [Google Scholar]
  119. Pinto, S.; De Carvalho, M. Correlation between forced vital capacity and slow vital capacity for the assessment of respiratory involvement in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: A prospective study. Amyotroph. Lateral Scler. Front. Degener. 2017, 18, 86–91. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  120. Strand, E.A.; Buder, E.H.; Yorkston, K.M.; Ramig, L.O. Differential phonatory characteristics of four women with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. J. Voice 1994, 8, 327–339. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  121. Touré-Tillery, M.; Fishbach, A. How to measure motivation: A guide for the experimental social psychologist. Soc. Pers. Psychol. Compass 2014, 8, 328–341. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  122. Yunusova, Y.; Green, J.R.; Wang, J.; Pattee, G.; Zinman, L. A protocol for comprehensive assessment of bulbar dysfunction in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). J. Vis. Exp. 2011, 48, e2422. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  123. Yunusova, Y.; Plowman, E.K.; Green, J.R.; Barnett, C.; Bede, P. Clinical measures of bulbar dysfunction in ALS. Front. Neurol. 2019, 10, 106. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  124. Steele, C.M.; Peladeau-Pigeon, M.; Barbon, C.A.E.; Guida, B.T.; Namasivayam-MacDonald, A.; Nascimento, W.; Smaoui, S.; Tapson, M.S.; Valenzano, T.; Waito, A.A.; et al. Reference values for healthy swallowing across the range from thin to extremely thick liquids. J. Speech Lang. Hear. Res. 2019, 62, 1338–1363. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  125. Rosenbek, J.C.; Robbins, J.A.; Roecker, E.B.; Coyle, J.L.; Wood, J.L. A penetration-aspiration scale. Dysphagia 1996, 11, 93–98. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  126. Smirnova, N.S.; Khitrov, M.V. Phoneticheski predstavitelny tekst dlya fundamentalnykh i prikladnykh issle-dovanii russkoi rechi. Izvestiya vysshikh uchebnykh zavedenii. Priborostroenie 2013, 56, 5–10. [Google Scholar]
  127. Boersma, P.; van Heuven, V. Speak and unSpeak with PRAAT. Glot Int. 2001, 5, 341–347. [Google Scholar]
  128. Gadesmann, M.; Miller, N. Reliability of speech diadochokinetic test measurement. Int. J. Lang. Commun. Disord. 2008, 43, 41–54. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  129. Pierce, J.E.; Cotton, S.; Perry, A. Alternating and sequential motion rates in older adults. Int. J. Lang. Commun. Disord. 2013, 48, 257–264. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  130. Teixeira, J.P.; Oliveira, C.; Lopes, C. Vocal acoustic analysis—Jitter, shimmer and HNR parameters. Procedia Technol. 2013, 9, 1112–1122. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  131. Clark, I.N.; Baker, F.A.; Peiris, C.L.; Shoebridge, G.; Taylor, N. Participant-selected music and physical activity in older adults following cardiac rehabilitation: A randomized controlled trial. Clin. Rehabil. 2017, 31, 329–339. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  132. Lim, H.A.; Miller, K.; Fabian, C. The effects of therapeutic instrumental music performance on endurance level, self-perceived fatigue level, and self-perceived exertion of inpatients in physical rehabilitation. J. Music Ther. 2011, 48, 124–148. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  133. Thaut, M.H.; Abiru, M. Rhythmic auditory stimulation in rehabilitation of movement disorders: A review of current research. Music Percept. 2010, 27, 263–269. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  134. Thaut, M.; McIntosh, G.; Rice, R. Rhythmic facilitation of gait training in hemiparetic stroke rehabilitation. J. Neurol. Sci. 1997, 151, 207–212. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  135. Alter, D.A.; O’Sullivan, M.; Oh, P.I.; Redelmeier, D.A.; Marzolini, S.; Liu, R.; Forhan, M.; Silver, M.; Goodman, J.M.; Bartel, L.R. Synchronized personalized music audio-playlists to improve adherence to physical activity among patients participating in a structured exercise program: A proof-of-principle feasibility study. Sports Med. Open 2015, 1, 23. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  136. Nelson, L.A.; Macdonald, M.; Stall, C.; Pazdan, R. Effects of interactive metronome therapy on cognitive functioning after blast-related brain injury: A randomized controlled pilot trial. Neuropsychology 2013, 27, 666–679. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  137. Carrow, E.; Rivera, V.; Mauldin, M.; Shamblin, L. Deviant speech characteristics in Motor Neuron Disease. Arch. Otolaryngol. Head Neck Surg. 1974, 100, 212–218. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  138. Eshghi, M.; Richburg, B.; Yunusova, Y.; Green, J.R. Instrumental evaluation of velopharyngeal dysfunction in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Age 2019, 1000, 62. [Google Scholar]
  139. Waito, A.A. Swallowing Physiology and Impairment in Individuals with Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS). Ph.D. Thesis, Rehabilitation Sciences Institute, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada, 2019. [Google Scholar]
  140. Bradt, J. Randomized controlled trials in music therapy: Guidelines for design and implementation. J. Music Ther. 2012, 49, 120–149. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  141. Chio, A.; Gauthier, A.; Montuschi, A.; Calvo, A.; Di Vito, N.; Ghiglione, P.; Mutani, R. A cross sectional study on determinants of quality of life in ALS. J. Neurol. Neurosurg. Psychiatry 2004, 75, 1597–1601. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  142. Yunusova, Y.; Graham, N.L.; Shellikeri, S.; Phuong, K.; Kulkarni, M.; Rochon, E.; Tang-Wai, D.F.; Chow, T.W.; Black, S.E.; Zinman, L.H.; et al. Profiling speech and pausing in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD). PLoS ONE 2016, 11, e0147573. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
Table 1. Experimental music therapy treatment protocol to support bulbar and respiratory functions of persons with early- and mid-stage amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
Table 1. Experimental music therapy treatment protocol to support bulbar and respiratory functions of persons with early- and mid-stage amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
I. Session Opening and Assessment
Time (approximately): 5 min.
Therapy objective: Assessment.
Materials and equipment: NRS (respiration) and NRS (voice) sheets; NRS data sheet; notebook for note taking. Two sturdy chairs situated facing each other, approximately 1.5 m apart. Optional: wheelchair, small table, pillow for participant’s comfort.
Procedure: Music therapist (MT) and participant exchange salutations. MT assesses participant’s physical and emotional state through observation and conversation, and re-establishes rapport through a brief conversation to ensure psychological comfort of the participant entering the session. The following information is recorded: (1) NRS for current perceived ease of respiration, (2) NRS for current perceived ease of voice production, (3) information about adherence to the assigned independent exercises routine: frequency, duration, difficulties, comments (starting at session 4). Participant is reminded that he/she is going to be guided through all the exercises and is welcome to participate to his/her comfort, to ask clarifying questions and make comments, to stop doing an exercise at any point if he/she feels uncomfortable or tired, and to pause, rest and hydrate as needed.
II. Body Alignment Exercise
Time (approximately): 3 min.
Therapy objective: To learn proper body alignment and its role in respiration, voice production and swallowing.
Materials and equipment: Visual aids for anatomy of singing.
Procedure: II.1. Body awareness.
Participant is encouraged to become aware of the physical sensation of his/her body, to pay close attention to any muscle tension, strain or stiffness and to gently move, stretch or self-massage to release those.
II.2. Body alignment
Participant is encouraged to become aware of his/her body alignment and to find a good sitting posture by maintaining the spinal alignment from the hips up. Suggested steps to achieve this are:
a. Both feet are on the ground, shoulder-width apart, forming a 90-degree angle with the thighs;
b. The pelvis is adjusted so there is slightly less curve in the lower back, and the spine feels extended both upwards and downwards;
c. The rib cage is now more upward and “open” (not collapsed);
d. The shoulders are suspended exactly over the rib cage (rather than pulled back or rolled forward);
e. The head is balanced at the top of the spine and feels almost weightless, with the front half of the skull is balanced in front of atlanto-occipital joint, and its hind half is balanced behind atlanto-occipital joint;
f. The upper body is poised and aligned, yet flexible and ready to move: the images of the whole body as a marionette suspended by a rope extending from the top of the skull, or of the head as a water lily flower resting on water surface may be helpful;
g. To check for proper spinal alignment: stretch arms above the head and bend them down so that fingertips of one hand touch the elbow of the opposite arm; sustain this position for several seconds, then let the arms drop down gently to the sides of the body, but keep the posture.
The anatomy and physiology of respiration, voice production and swallowing are briefly explained to the patient during these and following exercises in order to increase the patient’s awareness and sense of control over these processes.
III. Diaphragmatic Breathing Exercises
Time (approximately): 4 min.
Therapy objective: To become aware of diaphragmatic action, its role in respiration and benefits of diaphragmatic breathing.
Materials and equipment: Visual aids for anatomy of singing.
Procedure: III.1. Silent long diaphragmatic breathing (5–10 repetitions)
Participant is instructed to breathe in through the nose, with the mouth slightly open, then breathe out through the mouth, without sound. Air enters and escapes from the lungs with no effort: it is not forced in any way, and no rib action should occur. Participant is encouraged to place one hand on his/her abdomen and the other on his/her chest as he/she practices diaphragmatic breathing. The front and the side of the abdominal wall expand as the diaphragm contracts and pulls down during breath in, while no visible movement of the chest or shoulders occurs.
III.2. Audible diaphragmatic breathing on [s] sound (3 repetitions)
Participant is instructed to breathe in through the nose, with the mouth slightly open, then breathe out through the mouth making a continuous [s]sound until he/she runs out of air. The sound should not be forced, and no rib action should occur.
III.3. Silent long diaphragmatic breathing (3 repetitions)—see III.1.
III.4. Diaphragmatic breathing with audible sigh (3 repetitions)
Participant is instructed to breathe in through the nose, with the mouth slightly open, then breathe out through the mouth making an audible, very breathy sigh on a vowel sound (for example, ‘a’). The sound should not be forced, the throat should be relaxed, and no rib action should occur.
Note: No background music or music accompaniment will be used, as this will allow the participants to fully concentrate on the physical sensation of diaphragmatic breathing. During the first several sessions, the participant may experience a slightly uncomfortable pulling sensation around the posterior abdomen wall: this sensation is due to this group of muscles being more intensively worked than usual and will subside. When it becomes habitual, diaphragmatic breathing may reduce the effort necessary for breathing.
IV. Controlled Breathing and Lip Seal Exercise
Time (approximately): 3 min.
Therapy objective: To practice controlled breathing in order to create sustained airflow necessary for speech; to improve oxygen and carbon dioxide exchange; to maintain lip seal (necessary for swallowing and for decreasing salivation).
Materials and equipment: 37-key melodica; individual tube mouthpiece; metronome (Android smartphone, Metronome Beats application for Android, Kinivo ZX120 Mini Portable Wired Speaker for amplification). Optional: a small (approx. 15 cm × 15 cm) piece of lightweight fabric.
Procedure: IV.1. Pursed lip breathing (3 repetitions)
Participant is instructed to take a diaphragmatic breath in through the nose and to breathe out very slowly through pursed lips (“as if blowing on a fire”). A piece of lightweight fabric held by MT in front of the participant can be used for visual feedback.
IV.2. Controlled breathing and lip seal exercise
Participant is instructed to blow into the tube mouthpiece of the melodica while MT plays on the keys of the melodica the first 16 measures from “Old French Song” from “Children’s Album” (Op.39, No.16) by Tchaikovsky, at 60 bpm, with accompanying audible metronome click. Participant is advised to breathe in through the nose as necessary between the phrases, MT may provide conducting cues for inhale as necessary. The tempo is adjusted as needed (decreased for a longer exhale) to match participants’ ability.
Brainsci 12 00494 i001
V. Music-Assisted Relaxation for Voice Production
Time (approximately): 8 min.
Therapy objective: To elicit the relaxation response through music-assisted visualisation technique (V.1) and to relax and stretch the muscles involved in voice production (V.2–V.8).
Materials and equipment: Android smartphone; default music player for Android; Spotify application for Android (with subscription); Kinivo ZX120 Mini Portable Wired Speaker for amplification). Optional: lotion or oil for massage; Purell for hand disinfection (if MT touches participant’s face).
Procedure: Participant is reminded to maintain the aligned sitting posture, and to be gentle rather than forceful in releasing muscle tension.
V.1. Music-assisted visualisation and relaxation (about 4 min)
The recorded relaxing music is started in the background at the level allowing for a live narrative to be clearly heard. Maintaining the aligned sitting body position, participant is advised to close the eyes and to breathe deeply, as he/she is led by MT through a brief (about 3 min) music-assisted visualisation for relaxation. At the end of the exercise, as the background music continues, participant is invited to gently open his/her eyes, first looking downwards and then gradually orienting him/herself to the surroundings. The background music continues through the rest of the exercise sets.
V.2. The head and the neck muscles relaxation (2 repetitions)
Maintaining the body alignment, participant is advised to let his/her head slowly fall forward under its weight, to feel the stretch on the spine, and then to bring the head back to the balanced position at the top of the spine. Participant may also sway the head gently side to side during this exercise, if it feels appropriate.
V.3. The facial muscles relaxation
Participant is advised to rub his/her hands together or to warm them otherwise and to place the palms over closed eyes for several seconds, then to gently massage the face with circular motions of the pads of the fingers, using both hands, moving from hairline downwards to cheeks, lips and chin, spending more time on areas that feel tight. When the cheeks are being massaged, participant is advised to let his/ her jaw to hang slack. Face massage may be performed by MT or a care provider if the patient’s hand function is impaired.
V.5. The tongue muscles relaxation and stretch (3 repetitions)
Participant is encouraged to let the tongue relax and fall forward slightly out of the mouth by releasing its muscles, then to gently stretch the tongue out of the mouth down toward the chin, and to release again allowing the tongue to rest on the lower lip. Participant is further advised to pull the tongue back into the mouth as far as possible, hold for a few seconds, and release.
V.6. The mandible (jaw) relaxation and stretch
Participant is assisted in finding his/her temporomandibular joints. With the fingers placed over the joints, the patient allows the jaw to drop without resistance. Participant is encouraged to take his/her jaw between the thumb and forefinger and to gently move the jaw up and down, at first slowly, then faster. The movement will be unrestricted if the jaw is relaxed. Participant is then advised to move the jaw as far forward as possible, hold, then release; then to move the jaw as far back and upwards as possible (chin tuck), hold, then release. This stretch may be repeated 2 or 3 times.
V.7. The suprahyoid muscles relaxation
Participant is assisted in finding his/her suprahyoid (digastric and mylohyoid) muscles under his/her chin (the muscles responsible for elevating the larynx during swallowing). Participant is advised to gently massage these muscles with his/her thumbs in slow, “kneading” motions, pushing vertically up and releasing down.
V.8. The infrahyoid (strap) muscles relaxation Participant is assisted in finding his/her larynx by placing fingers flat against the front of his/ her neck and swallowing, thumb and forefinger of one hand are used to gently move the larynx side to side several times.
VI. “Ping Pong” Soft Palate Exercise
Time (approximately): 1 min.
Therapy objective: To tonicise the soft palate muscles involved in velopharyngeal function and to practice the proper soft palate position for phonation.
Materials and equipment: None.
Procedure: Participant is instructed to “yawn politely” (half yawn) in order to find the proper position for relaxed sound production [95]. It may be helpful to imagine there is a ping pong ball in the back of the mouth and to hold this position for several seconds. Repeat 5 times.
VII. Phonation Exercises
Time (approximately): 5 min.
Therapy objective: To facilitate proper engagement of arytenoid cartilages and vocal folds (VII.1–VII.3), to increase the speech rate (VII.3).
Materials and equipment: Visual aids for anatomy of singing.
Procedure: VII.1. “Hah” sigh exercise (2 repetitions)
Participant is instructed to take a breath, to expel about half of it, then to add a light, “lazy” sigh (“hah”), starting in the voice midrange and inflecting downwards. The tongue rests in the limp position, the jaw is relaxed.
Brainsci 12 00494 i002
VII.2. Interrupted “hah” sigh exercise (2 repetitions)
Participant is instructed to repeat the previous exercise, allowing the lips to close and open several times at the beginning of the sigh, resulting in a light humming sound (“hah-mah-mah-mah-mah”). The lips are not pressed firmly together like in the regular [m] sound. The tongue rests in the limp position, the jaw is relaxed.
Brainsci 12 00494 i003
VII.3. Voiced consonant sigh exercise (2 repetitions for each consonant)
Maintaining relaxation of facial and laryngeal muscles, participant is instructed to take a diaphragmatic breath, then to expel the air while making a continuous consonant sound, starting in the voice midrange and inflecting downwards. An accompanying short vowel sound has to be added to the stop consonants (‘b’, ‘d’, ‘g’), e.g., “ba-ba-ba-ba-ba”. The sound should not be forced. The jaw and tongue are relaxed. The sequence of the consonants for this exercise is: /v/, /z/, /z</, /l/, rolled /r/, /j/, /b/, /d/, /m/, /n/, /g/. Rolled /r/ may present a challenge for some people. This is not related to ALS and should not discourage the patient from attempting this exercise.
VIII. Consonant Range Cantillation Exercise
Time (approximately): 2 min.
Therapy objective: To facilitate tongue movement ease and speed, to improve velopharyngeal function, to prevent (reduce) hypernasality.
Materials and equipment: None.
Procedure: Participant is instructed to take a diaphragmatic breath and say “mah-nah-ng-ah” in cantillation once, then proceed saying “mah-nah-ng-ah” 3 times on one exhalation, next—saying it 6 times on one exhalation, then 9 times on one exhalation, and, finally, 12 times on one exhalation. Participant is encouraged to maintain and note the freedom of tongue and jaw movement as he/she does this exercise. Note: The sequence of tongue movements required for this exercise involves fast progression from the resting position (/m/) to hard palate (/n/), to soft palate (/g/) [93]. Besides facilitating tongue movement ease and speed, this exercise has the potential to improve velopharyngeal function and, thus, to prevent (reduce) hypernasality, which also contributes to speech intelligibility [85].
IX. Velopharyngeal Port Exercise
Time (approximately): 3 min.
Therapy objective: To improve velopharyngeal function, to prevent hypernasality.
Materials and equipment: Visual aids for anatomy of singing. Acoustic guitar; metronome (Android smartphone, Metronome Beats application for Android, Kinivo ZX120 Mini Portable Wired Speaker for amplification).
Procedure: Starting in the lower midrange of his/her voice, participant is instructed to sing the syllables “hun-ga” three times as a scale from sol to do. “Hun” corresponds with the offbeat, and “ga” falls on the beat. The exercise is then modulated gradually up by semitones, until it reaches the limit of the participant’s comfortable range. After that, it is modulated down by semitones until it is three semitones below the starting key. The therapist models the exercise and provides the guitar accompaniment, and sings together with the participant. The patient is encouraged to notice the switching between nasal (“hun”) and non-nasal sound (“ga”). Audible metronome click is setup. The tempo of the accompaniment can be adjusted to the ability of the patient. Gradual increase to up to 90 bpm is advisable in later sessions.
Brainsci 12 00494 i004
X. Impulse Diaphragmatic Breathing Exercises
Time (approximately): 2 min.
Therapy objective: To increase the efficiency and speed of relaxed diaphragmatic inhalation.
Materials and equipment: Acoustic guitar; metronome (Android smartphone, Metronome Beats application for Android, Kinivo ZX120 Mini Portable Wired Speaker for amplification).
Procedure: X.1. Impulse breathing with short “hah” exhale (2 repetitions)
The exercise starts with participant listening to 8 beats of audible metronome click initially set at 4/4, 64 bpm. Participant is instructed to fully relax abdominal muscles, letting air effortlessly enter the lungs, then to abruptly expel the air with a short, though deep and strong (“barking”) “hah” sound and to immediately let the abdominal muscles relax again, letting air into the lungs. Suggested sequence: (1) listen and rest for 8 beats, (2) 8 ”hah” utterances for 8 beats, (3) listen and rest for 8 beats, (4) 8 ”hah” utterances for 8 beats, (5) stop. The tempo should be slightly faster than the tempo most comfortable for the participant and may be increased gradually in subsequent sessions if the patient is ready.
X.2. Impulse breathing with sustained “hah” exhales (4 repetitions)
As in the previous exercise, participant is advised to fully relax the abdominal muscles, letting air effortlessly enter the lungs. Then, the air is expelled 3 times following the pattern: “hah-hah-haaaaaaaah” (short-short-long), where /a/ vowel is very open, strong and deep, but is not forced. After each syllable, the abdominal muscles should relax again, letting air into the lungs.
XI. Sustained Vowels Production Exercises
Time (approximately): 5 min.
Therapy objective: To practice full diaphragmatic breathing and healthy vocal folds coordination for sustained, supported vowel production.
Materials and equipment: Acoustic guitar; metronome (Android smartphone, Metronome Beats application for Android, Kinivo ZX120 Mini Portable Wired Speaker for amplification).
Procedure: XI.1. Vowel shaping exercise (3 repetitions)
With the mouth fully closed, participant is instructed to silently form vowel shapes in the following sequence: /a/, /e/, /i/, /o/, /u/, paying attention to position changes in tongue and facial muscles. MT model the vowels (with sound).
XI.2. “Hah-meh-mee-moh-moo” sigh exercise (3 repetitions)
Similar to exercise VII.3, participant is encouraged to take a breath, then expel it on a light, “lazy” sigh, starting in the voice midrange and inflecting downwards. During this exhale, participant forms the vowel shapes /a/, /e/, /i/, /o/, /u/ in a relaxed manner and allows the lips to close and open several times, resulting in light humming sound: “hah-meh-mee-moh-moo”. The lips are not pressed firmly together like in the regular [m] sound, and the jaw is relaxed.
Brainsci 12 00494 i005
XI.3 “Hah-eh-ee-oh-oo” sigh exercise (3 repetitions)
The instructions for this exercise are the same as for the exercise IX.2., but the lip movement resulting in the light /m/ sound is now omitted: “hah-eh-hee-oh-oo”.
Brainsci 12 00494 i006
XI.4. Sustained vowels exercise (2 repetitions, if well tolerated)
Comfortable tone from participant’s midrange is chosen for the exercise and becomes the tonal center (do). The patient sustains do for four measures (2/4, 90 bpm) on “mah” syllable, then rests for 2 measures. The next syllable (“meh”) is then sustained is a similar manner, then “mee”, “moh” and “moo”. The therapist provides the guitar accompaniment, and sings together with the participant. Accompanying audible metronome is setup at 2/4, 90 bpm. The tempo is adjusted as needed (decreased for a longer exhale) to match participants’ ability. The exercise may be performed twice, if well tolerated.
Brainsci 12 00494 i007
Note: In case of excessive perceived nasality, participant may be advised to “adopt a pleasant facial expression”, slightly lifting the zygomatic muscles (“lifting the cheeks”).
XII. Laryngeal Elevation through Vocalisation (Gliding Vowels) Exercise
Time (approximately): 5 min
Therapy objective: To facilitate sustained laryngeal elevation.
Materials and equipment: Acoustic guitar; metronome (Android smartphone, Metronome Beats application for Android, Kinivo ZX120 Mini Portable Wired Speaker for amplification).
Procedure: MT models the exercise and sings together with the participant. A comfortable tone from the participant’s midrange is chosen for the exercise. Starting from this tone on “mah” syllable, participant is instructed to slide up a major third interval by beat 4 (the second dotted quarter) of the measure and to sustain this tone until the end of the measure. This singing pattern is repeated for 3 more measures, as the harmony changes. Then, 4 measures on “mee” and then 4 measures on “moo” follow. If well tolerated, the whole exercise may be repeated once and a major third interval may be increased to a perfect fifth for increased laryngeal elevation. Live guitar accompaniment is provided by MT, in 12/8, 130 bpm, one harmony per measure, with accompanying audible metronome click. Repeat 2 times if well tolerated.
Brainsci 12 00494 i008
XIII. Vocal Cord Relaxation Exercises
Time (approximately): 2 min.
Therapy objective: To relax vocal cords following the singing exercises.
Materials and equipment: None.
Procedure: Participant is instructed to use diaphragmatic or mixed types of breathing during these relaxation exercises.
XIII.1. Vocal fry exercise
Participant is instructed to take a deep breath and to make a vocal fry sound for the duration of the exhale. Can be repeated.
XIII.2. Deep breathing (3 repetitions)
Participant is instructed to breathe in through the nose, with the mouth slightly open, then breathe out through the mouth, without sound. Air enters and escapes from the lungs with no effort: it is not forced in any way. Participant can choose to use diaphragmatic or mixed (diaphragmatic and chest) types of breathing.
XIII.3. Exhale on hard [h] (3 repetitions)
Participant is instructed to continue deep breathing and then to exhale on a “lazy”, long, uninterrupted hard [h] sound.
XIV. Preferred Song Performance
Time (approximately): 5 min.
Therapy objective: To relax vocal cords following the singing exercises. To reinforce all the voice skills practiced in previous exercises (body alignment and posture, diaphragmatic breathing, proper phonation, soft palate elevation, relaxed consonant articulation, etc.), to provide a motivating reward at the end of the session.
Materials and equipment: Acoustic guitar. Optional: song lyrics printout.
Procedure: Participant is invited to sing his/her preferred song in a comfortable range, at a comfortable tempo, with live guitar accompaniment provided by MT. MT may choose to sing together with participant to encourage participation and to model healthy singing technique. Both the participant and the MT provide brief feedback on the performance at the end of the song.
Selection of the song for this exercise will occur as follows. At recruitment, each participant will be asked to provide the list of his/her 3 to 5 favourite songs to sing. MT will choose one of these songs to include into the protocol, giving preference to songs with simple melodic and harmonic structure, enough pauses for proper phrasing, moderate tempo, and emotionally neutral or “positive”.
XV. Session Closure and Assessment
Time (approximately): 5 min.
Therapy objective: Assessment.
Materials and equipment: NRS (respiration) and NRS (voice) sheets; NRS data sheet; notebook for note taking.
Procedure: MT closes the session, acknowledges participant’s effort and reminds of the upcoming session(s) if any are left. The following information is gathered and recorded into the patient’s individual data sheet: (1) VAS for current perceived ease of respiration, and (2) VAS for current perceived ease of voice production. MT instructs (or reminds) the participant to practice recommended daily exercises, if possible, always taking precautions to avoid strain and exhaustion (to “stop if something doesn’t feel right”). MT instructs (or reminds) the participant to follow the voice health guidelines [79].
Table 2. Outcome measures and data collection summary table.
Table 2. Outcome measures and data collection summary table.
Outcome MeasureOutcome Measure DescriptionData Collection Points
FEASIBILITY OUTCOME MEASURES
RecruitmentAll newly diagnosed patients at ALS Moscow Centre living within the Moscow city limits and meeting the inclusion and exclusion criteria were invited to participate, until the desired sample size (n = 8) was achieved or the cut-off recruitment date. Target recruitment over 80% was considered the marker of a successful feasibility trial.Prior to the cut-off recruitment date
RetentionThe total number of participants recruited was compared with the total number of participants who completed this study. A retention rate over 70% at the end of follow-up period was considered the marker of a successful feasibility trial.Week 1, week 16
AdherenceThe number of music therapy sessions attended by each participant was recorded as an adherence measure for this study. Mean adherence across all participants who completed this study was calculated. Mean adherence for the group calculated at over 75% music therapy sessions delivered was considered the marker of a successful feasibility trial.Each music therapy session (total of 12), throughout the therapy phase (weeks 6–12)
ToleranceShort-term tolerability of the music therapy treatment protocol was assessed by measuring change in ratings on the self-reported Ease of Respiration Numeric Rating Scale and change in ratings on the self-reported Ease of Speech Numeric Rating Scale before and after every music therapy session. The outcome could range from “1” (very difficult) to “10” (very easy). Recorded by the music therapist.Before and after each music therapy session (total of 12), throughout the therapy phase (weeks 6–12)
Self-motivationSelf-reported adherence to a suggested independent exercise routine was recorded to assess levels of self-motivation that participants demonstrated with regard to music therapy treatment. Any attempt to practice was recorded. The number of independent exercises sets performed, in proportion to the number of days when no visit from the music therapist was scheduled, recorded during the sessions from 4 to 12 during the 6 week treatment phase, was calculated, measured in percent.Each music therapy session starting at session 4 (total of 9), throughout the therapy phase (weeks 7–12)
Treatment experience of participants—persons with ALSSemi-structured interviews with research participants—persons with ALS—were conducted pre-treatment (week 5) and at the end of the follow-up period (week 16). Participant’s answers to open questions in regard to expectations for and impressions of music therapy treatment were written down during a home visit by a trained research assistant. Interpretative phenomenological analysis was applied to find prominent common themes across the semi-structured interviews.Week 5, week 16
Caregiver’s experienceSemi-structured interviews with caregivers were conducted prior to treatment (week 5) and at the end of the follow-up period (week 16). Primary caregivers, if identified by participants—persons with ALS—and only with their permission, were approached for the interviews. Caregivers’ answers to open questions in regard to expectations for and impressions of music therapy treatment were written down during a home visit by a trained research assistant. Interpretative phenomenological analysis was applied to find prominent common themes across the semi-structured interviews.Week 5, week 16
Music therapist’s perspectiveIndividual treatment notes taken after each session and generalised “field notes” taken twice a week, after completion of each consequent session by all the participants, were submitted by the music therapist. Thematic narrative analysis of the notes was conducted.Each music therapy session (total of 12), throughout the therapy phase (weeks 7–12)
BIOMEDICAL OUTCOME MEASURES
Outcome measures to assess the long-term changes in respiration
Change of Forced Vital Capacity (FVC) from baseline at Week 6, week 12, week 16Forced Vital Capacity (FVC) is a standard spirometry test which measures the volume of air that can forcibly be blown out after full inspiration; measured in %. Measured during a home visit by a nurse.Week 1, week 6, week 12, week 16
Change of Maximal Inspiratory Pressure (MIP) from baseline at week 6, week 12, week 16Maximal Inspiratory Pressure (MIP) is the inspiratory pressure generated against a completely occluded airway; used to evaluate inspiratory respiratory muscle strength; measured in cm H2O. Measured during a home visit by a nurse.Week 1, week 6, week 12, week 16
Change of Maximal Expiratory Pressure (MEP) from baseline at week 6, week 12, week 16Maximal Expiratory Pressure (MEP) is a measure of the strength of respiratory muscles, obtained by having the patient exhale as strongly as possible against a mouthpiece; measured in cm H2O. Measured during a home visit by a nurse.Week 1, week 6, week 12, week 16
Outcome measures to assess the long-term changes in cough
Change of Peak Expiratory Flow (PEF) from baseline at week 6, week 12, week 16Peak Expiratory Flow (PEF) is a measure of cough effectiveness, portable peak flow meter was used; measured in %. Measured during a home visit by a nurse.Week 1, week 6, week 12, week 16
Outcome measures to assess the long-term changes in speech
The Change of Center for Neurologic Study Bulbar Function Scale (CNS-BFS) Speech subscore from baseline at week 6, week 12, week 16The Center for Neurologic Study Bulbar Function Scale (CNS-BFS) consists of three domains (swallowing, speech, and salivation), each of which is assessed with a 7-item, self-report questionnaire. Each question is scored from “1” (does not apply) to “5” (applies most of the time). Speech domain subscore can range from “7” (best outcome) to “35” (worst outcome). The result was recorded during a home visit by a trained research assistant.Week 1, week 6, week 12, week 16
Change in acoustic assessment parameters of recorded voice from baseline at week 6, week 12, week 16Voice samples were recorded during a home visit by a trained research assistant digitally in .wav format, using a Shure WH20XLR Dynamic Headset Microphone, Alesis iO Dock audio interface, Apple iPad 2 tablet and GarageBand software. Acoustic analysis of the voice samples was conducted using the PRAAT linguistic computer program to calculate the following outcome measures:
Maximum Phonation Time (MPT), sound /a/, measured in seconds;
Maximum Repetition Rate—Alternating (AMR), /pataka/ sequence, measured in total number of syllables uttered as fast and as clear as possible on one breath;
Maximum Repetition Rate—Sequential (SMR), /ba/ syllable, measured in total number of syllables uttered as fast and as clear as possible on one breath;
Jitter, local, sound /a/, measured in percent,
Shimmer, local, sound /a/, measured in percent;
Harmonics-to-Noise Ratio (HNR), measured in Db, sustained /a/;
Vowel Space Area (VSA), separate vowels /a, e, i, o, u/, measured in squared Hz;
Fundamental frequency (F0), oral reading, measured in Hz;
Speaking rate, oral reading, measured in words per minute;
Speech–pause ratio, oral reading, measured in seconds per minute;
Pause frequency, oral reading, measured in number of pauses per minute;
Fundamental frequency (F0), spontaneous speech, measured in Hz;
Speaking rate, spontaneous speech, measured in words per minute;
Speech–pause ratio, spontaneous speech, measured in seconds per minute;
Pause frequency spontaneous speech, measured in number of pauses per minute.
Week 1, week 6, week 12, week 16
Change in perceptual assessment parameters of recorded voice from baseline at week 6, week 12, week 16Voice samples were recorded during a home visit by a trained research assistant digitally in .wav format, using a Shure WH20XLR Dynamic Headset Microphone, Alesis iO Dock audio interface, Apple iPad 2 tablet and GarageBand software.
Perceptual analysis of the voice samples was performed by three qualified speech-language specialists to assess change in hypernasality level of spontaneous speech, measured in points. Inter-rater reliability was calculated for the perceptual analysis results.
Week 1, week 6, week 12, week 16
Outcome measures to assess the long-term changes in swallowing
The Change of Center for Neurologic Study Bulbar Function Scale (CNS-BFS) Swallowing subscore from baseline at week 6, week 12, week 16The Center for Neurologic Study Bulbar Function Scale (CNS-BFS) consists of three domains (swallowing, speech, and salivation), each of which is assessed with a 7-item, self-report questionnaire. Each question is scored from “1” (does not apply) to “5” (applies most of the time). Swallowing domain subscore can range from “7” (best outcome) to “35” (worst outcome). The result was recorded during a home visit by a trained research assistant. Week 1, week 6, week 12, week 16
Change in videofluoroscopic swallowing study (VFSS) results from baseline at week 6, week 12VFSS (videofluoroscopic swallowing study), an X-ray-based method of evaluating a person’s swallowing ability, was performed by a trained specialist during a visit to a laboratory using a BV Pulsera Mobile C-arm fluoroscope, pulsing at 30 pulses per second and recorded on built-in Medical DVD Recorder at 30 frames per second. Each participant swallows 10 mL of nectar and pudding-thick liquid boluses, thickened with a xanthan gum-based thickener (i.e., Nestle Thicken-Up Clear®) and mixed to 40% weight-to-volume concentration with BarVIPS powder.
VFSS video clips were reviewed and scored by a trained speech-language pathologist, using frame-by-frame analysis following operational definitions outlined by [124]. The following outcome parameters were calculated from VFSS video clips, recorded at three time points, to assess long-term changes in swallowing:
Time-to-Laryngeal Vestibule Closure, nectar 10 mL, measured in ms;
Time-to-Laryngeal Vestibule Closure, pudding 10 mL, measured in ms;
Maximum Pharyngeal Constriction Area, nectar 10 mL, measured in % C2–42;
Maximum Pharyngeal Constriction Area, pudding 10 mL, measured in % C2–42;
Peak Position of the Hyoid Bone, nectar 10 mL, measured in % C2–4,
Peak Position of the Hyoid Bone, pudding 10 mL, measured in % C2–4;
Penetration–Aspiration Scale Score (worst), nectar 10 mL, measured in points;
Penetration–Aspiration Scale Score (worst), pudding 10 mL, measured in points;
Total Pharyngeal Residue C24 area, nectar 10 mL, measured in % C2–4;
Total Pharyngeal Residue C24 area, pudding 10 mL, measured in % C2–4;
Laryngeal vestibule closure, nectar 10 mL, described as complete, partial, or incomplete;
Laryngeal vestibule closure, pudding 10 mL, described as complete, partial, or incomplete.
Week 1, week 6, week 12
Table 3. FVC (%) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
Table 3. FVC (%) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
ParticipantFVC_t1FVC_t2FVC_t3FVC_t4
176758980
269838579
3121115113113
487838872
563606163
682736064
784636283
Mean83.14378.85779.71479.143
Table 4. MIP (cm H2O) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
Table 4. MIP (cm H2O) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
ParticipantMIP_t1MIP_t2MIP_t3MIP_t4
173699198
244265781
341384142
455624954
532393342
670566058
748405751
Mean51.85747.14355.42960.857
Table 5. MEP (cm H2O) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
Table 5. MEP (cm H2O) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
ParticipantMEP_tp1MEP_tp2MEP_tp3MEP_tp4
168659479
263768387
367818077
4918610391
535473534
679595754
755355051
Mean65.42964.14371.71467.571
Table 6. PEF (%) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
Table 6. PEF (%) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
ParticipantPCF_t1PCF_t2PCF_t3PCF_t4
130223682
2120103121128
399106107127
41099410093
566506966
668687575
764758080
Mean79.42974.00084.00093.000
Table 7. CNS-BFS speech subscore (points) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
Table 7. CNS-BFS speech subscore (points) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
ParticipantCNSBFSsp_t1CNSBFSsp_t2CNSBFSsp_t3CNSBFSsp_t4
118161414
2813810
3810109
487109
524272429
612131516
710999
Mean12.57113.57112.85713.714
Table 8. MPT (seconds) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
Table 8. MPT (seconds) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
ParticipantMPT_t1MPT_t2MPT_t3MPT_t4
115.964.6612.236.95
219.664.6213.468.14
38.527.136.258.13
411.8415.714.4811.51
56.688.489.269.48
617.115.322.3718.04
73.614.347.43.71
Mean11.9108.60412.2079.423
Table 9. Jitter (local, %) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
Table 9. Jitter (local, %) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
ParticipantJitter_t1Jitter_t2Jitter_t3Jitter_t4
10.4310.3020.1720.376
20.3180.6090.1870.519
30.3710.3770.5470.378
40.460.7010.2540.356
50.3080.3660.330.314
60.4220.5970.3890.497
70.5370.3060.5120.436
Mean0.4070.4650.3420.411
Table 10. Shimmer (local, %) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
Table 10. Shimmer (local, %) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
ParticipantShimmer_t1Shimmer_t2Shimmer_t3Shimmer_t4
12.2523.4791.0312.755
25.7843.9941.2755.758
32.9942.684.5262.827
43.5533.2623.2256.961
51.9832.5051.2852.034
63.7998.1945.6438.031
74.1332.3265.5452.386
Mean3.5003.7773.2194.393
Table 11. HNR (Db) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
Table 11. HNR (Db) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
ParticipantNHR_t1NHR_t2NHR_t3NHR_t4
118.45421.14125.7421.167
221.13819.71530.72618.556
320.31422.3918.35919.493
420.22322.08121.81217.79
523.40225.09125.49923.161
620.66715.40818.94115.251
718.39521.53819.41320.543
Mean20.37021.05222.92719.423
Table 12. MRR-A (syllables, total) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
Table 12. MRR-A (syllables, total) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
ParticipantMRR-A_t1MRR-A_t2MRR-A_t3MRR-A_t4
133335443
21716910860
310810212693
44887117170
51232115
666514545
736304536
Mean67.71453.57173.71466.000
Table 13. MRR-S (syllables, total) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
Table 13. MRR-S (syllables, total) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
ParticipantMRR-S_t1MRR-S_t2MRR-S_t3MRR-S_t4
132292930
277278157
38991105101
444209286
511132114
639484347
713164527
Mean43.57134.85759.42951.714
Table 14. VSA (Hertz, squared) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
Table 14. VSA (Hertz, squared) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
ParticipantVSA_t1VSA_t2VSA_t3VSA_t4
1335,474383,408.5293,932.5399,866.5
2194,705689,702.5615,575774,734.5
3435,659478,926.5394,459422,385
4422,040.5469,824.5479,047.5431,202
5287,983.5116,180340,084.5398,212
6208,821226,215190,827199,621
7430,167242,673.5433,381309,478
Mean330,692.9372,418.6392,472.4419,357.0
Table 15. Fundamental frequency (Hz) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
Table 15. Fundamental frequency (Hz) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
ParticipantFreq_t1Freq_t2Freq_t3Freq_t4
1162.2161.8162.6179.9
2232.6243231.2234.9
3161.1156.2177176.5
4127.2129.3145.7130.6
5228.7224.6212.8213.3
6120.3143.8139.4157.4
7193.7194.5196.2187.5
Mean175.114179.029180.700182.871
Table 16. Speaking rate (words per minute) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
Table 16. Speaking rate (words per minute) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
ParticipantSR_t1SR_t2SR_t3SR_t4
168607272
2130142136136
3138110130114
498106110110
572625254
684747676
798768888
Mean98.28690.00094.85792.857
Table 17. Speech–pause ratio (seconds per minute) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
Table 17. Speech–pause ratio (seconds per minute) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
ParticipantSPAt_t1SPAt_t2SPAt_t3SPAt_t4
121261714
2981010
33845
413131110
515181715
6111188
710151213
Mean11.71414.14311.28610.714
Table 18. Hypernasality level (points) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
Table 18. Hypernasality level (points) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
ParticipantNasality_tp1Nasality_tp2Nasality_tp3Nasality_tp4
11.331.672.332.00
24.004.004.003.67
33.673.003.333.33
44.003.674.003.67
51.671.671.001.00
63.002.672.002.00
72.672.333.002.33
Mean2.9052.7142.8102.571
Table 19. CNS-BFS swallowing subscore (points) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
Table 19. CNS-BFS swallowing subscore (points) individual and mean measurements at four assessment time points.
ParticipantCNSBFSsw_t1CNSBFSsw_t2CNSBFSsw_t3CNSBFSsw_t4
19788
211131010
3111487
413121013
516191819
613161420
712121212
Mean12.14313.28611.42912.714
Table 20. LVCrt, nectar 10 mL (ms) individual and mean measurements at three assessment time point.
Table 20. LVCrt, nectar 10 mL (ms) individual and mean measurements at three assessment time point.
ParticipantLVCrtn_t1LVCrtn_t2LVCrtn_t3
2360400240
3240160240
4240280280
5600440440
6440400160
Mean376336272
Table 21. LVCrt, pudding 10 mL (ms) individual and mean measurements at three assessment time points.
Table 21. LVCrt, pudding 10 mL (ms) individual and mean measurements at three assessment time points.
ParticipantLVCrtp_t1LVCrtp_t2LVCrtp_t3
2400240240
3360360240
4200240120
5640360400
6280440320
Mean376328264
Table 22. MPCAn, nectar 10 mL (% C2–42) individual and mean measurements at three assessment time points.
Table 22. MPCAn, nectar 10 mL (% C2–42) individual and mean measurements at three assessment time points.
ParticipantMPCAnn_t1MPCAnn_t2MPCAnn_t3
23.4094175810.139447612.543253
32.94559155.7107126397.754257
43.517076625.4458065122.597211
59.640756756.6631438713.893648
611.63978514.5143322815.84521
Mean6.230525498.4946885816.526715
Table 23. MPCAn, pudding 10 mL (%C2–42) individual and mean measurements at three assessment time points.
Table 23. MPCAn, pudding 10 mL (%C2–42) individual and mean measurements at three assessment time points.
ParticipantMPCAnp_t1MPCAnp_t2MPCAnp_t3
23.0790576044.3309007774.025907331
34.674848667.2004537336.510919871
45.4334597448.7317342293.957121688
57.90919222710.09399096.568875036
616.3157916640.6557265633.12445659
Mean7.48246997914.2025612410.8374561
Table 24. PeakXY, nectar 10 mL (%C2–4) individual and mean measurements at three assessment time points.
Table 24. PeakXY, nectar 10 mL (%C2–4) individual and mean measurements at three assessment time points.
Participant PeakXYn_t1PeakXYn_t2PeakXYn_t3
2149.1152.3156.9
3150.9141.2145.5
4180.6184.3183.9
5140.9148146.2
6163.9160.6160.5
Mean157.08157.28158.6
Table 25. PeakXY, pudding 10 mL (%C2–4) individual and mean measurements at three assessment time points.
Table 25. PeakXY, pudding 10 mL (%C2–4) individual and mean measurements at three assessment time points.
Participant PeakXYp_t1PeakXYp_t2PeakXYp_t3
2151.5145.9149.7
3148.9151.1148.7
4196.2181.8199.9
5145.3152.1148.2
6172148.7165.2
Mean162.78155.92162.34
Table 26. PAS (worst), nectar 10 mL (points) individual and mean measurements at three assessment time points.
Table 26. PAS (worst), nectar 10 mL (points) individual and mean measurements at three assessment time points.
ParticipantPASn_t1PASn_t2PASn_t3
2115
3112
4112
5265
6111
Mean1.223
Table 27. PAS (worst), pudding 10 mL (points) individual and mean measurements at three assessment time points.
Table 27. PAS (worst), pudding 10 mL (points) individual and mean measurements at three assessment time points.
ParticipantPASp_t1PASp_t2PASp_t3
2511
3122
4111
5153
6113
Mean1.822
Table 28. TotC24, nectar 10 mL (%C2–4) individual and mean measurements at three assessment time points.
Table 28. TotC24, nectar 10 mL (%C2–4) individual and mean measurements at three assessment time points.
ParticipanttotC24n_t1totC24n_t2totC24n_t3
21.51144666.7195013381.381531396
31.41089573.1424489024.130194898
44.89399372.9539709782.907582467
58.16213924.2320661811.982200267
613.58274128.7906157818.01529424
Mean5.91224329.1677206355.683360654
Table 29. TotC24, pudding 10 mL (%C2–4) individual and mean measurements at three assessment time points.
Table 29. TotC24, pudding 10 mL (%C2–4) individual and mean measurements at three assessment time points.
ParticipanttotC24p_t1totC24p_t2totC24p_t3
21.675652214.611418293.509672232
36.007757568.556094615.723845175
42.912943377.478436183.484580659
53.557386976.669285154.553890179
617.909024145.145546221.13985385
Mean6.4125528414.49215617.682368419
Table 30. LVC, nectar 10 mL, individual descriptions at three assessment time points.
Table 30. LVC, nectar 10 mL, individual descriptions at three assessment time points.
ParticipantLVCn_t1LVCn_t2 LVCn_t3
2Partialcompletepartial
3Completecompletecomplete
4Competecompletecomplete
5Partialcompletepartial
6Completecompletecomplete
Table 31. LVC, pudding 10 mL, individual descriptions at three assessment time points.
Table 31. LVC, pudding 10 mL, individual descriptions at three assessment time points.
ParticipantLVCp_t1LVCp_t2 LVCp_t3
2Partialcompletepartial
3Completecompletecomplete
4Completecompletecomplete
5Completepartialpartial
6Completecompletecomplete
Table 32. Suggested biomedical outcome measures and parameters for the efficacy study.
Table 32. Suggested biomedical outcome measures and parameters for the efficacy study.
Outcome Measures to Assess the Long-Term Changes in Respiration
Change of Forced Vital Capacity (FVC)
Change of Maximal Inspiratory Pressure (MIP)
Change of Maximal Expiratory Pressure (MEP)
Outcome measures to assess the long-term changes in cough
Peak Expiratory Flow (PEF)
Outcome measures to assess the long-term changes in speech
Change of the Center for Neurologic Study Bulbar Function Scale (CNS-BFS) Speech subscore
Change in acoustic assessment parameters of recorded voice samples:
Maximum Phonation Time (MPT)
Maximum Repetition Rate—Alternating (AMR)
Maximum Repetition Rate—Sequential (SMR)
Jitter, local
Shimmer, local
Harmonics-toNoise Ratio (HNR)
Vowel Space Area (VSA)
Fundamental frequency (F0)
Speaking rate, oral reading
Speech–pause ratio, oral reading
Pause frequency, oral reading
Change of aerodynamic measure of nasal flow
Outcome measures to assess the long-term changes in swallowing
Change of the Center for Neurologic Study Bulbar Function Scale (CNS-BFS) Swallowing subscore
Change in videofluoroscopic swallowing study (VFSS):
Time-to-Laryngeal Vestibule Closure, liquid 10 mL, nectar 10 mL, pudding 10 mL
Maximum Pharyngeal Constriction Area, liquid 10 mL, nectar 10 mL, pudding 10 mL
Maximum Pharyngeal Constriction Area, liquid 10 mL, nectar 10 mL, pudding 10 mL
Peak Position of the Hyoid Bone, liquid 10 mL, nectar 10 mL, pudding 10 mL Penetration–Aspiration Scale Score (worst), liquid 10 mL, nectar 10 mL, pudding 10 mL
Total Pharyngeal Residue C24area, liquid 10 mL, nectar 10 mL, pudding 10 mL Laryngeal vestibule closure, liquid 10 mL, nectar 10 mL, pudding 10 mL
Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Apreleva Kolomeytseva, A.T.; Brylev, L.; Eshghi, M.; Bottaeva, Z.; Zhang, J.; Fachner, J.C.; Street, A.J. Home-Based Music Therapy to Support Bulbar and Respiratory Functions of Persons with Early and Mid-Stage Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis—Protocol and Results from a Feasibility Study. Brain Sci. 2022, 12, 494. https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci12040494

AMA Style

Apreleva Kolomeytseva AT, Brylev L, Eshghi M, Bottaeva Z, Zhang J, Fachner JC, Street AJ. Home-Based Music Therapy to Support Bulbar and Respiratory Functions of Persons with Early and Mid-Stage Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis—Protocol and Results from a Feasibility Study. Brain Sciences. 2022; 12(4):494. https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci12040494

Chicago/Turabian Style

Apreleva Kolomeytseva, Alisa T., Lev Brylev, Marziye Eshghi, Zhanna Bottaeva, Jufen Zhang, Jörg C. Fachner, and Alexander J. Street. 2022. "Home-Based Music Therapy to Support Bulbar and Respiratory Functions of Persons with Early and Mid-Stage Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis—Protocol and Results from a Feasibility Study" Brain Sciences 12, no. 4: 494. https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci12040494

Note that from the first issue of 2016, this journal uses article numbers instead of page numbers. See further details here.

Article Metrics

Back to TopTop