Harp Has The Power to Soothe But It Can Also Heal
MSNBC.com
Updated: 12:01 a.m. ET Dec. 26, 2005
URBANA, Ill. - When a harpist wearing blue hospital scrubs started
playing the familiar strains of Pachelbel’s Canon during Edith
Zook’s heart procedure, the scene couldn’t have been more surreal.
Surrounded by cutting-edge medical equipment, the 83-year-old
patient lay unconscious and sedated, with skinny electrode-equipped
catheters snaking from veins in her right thigh and shoulder into
her heart. They provided a conduit for a video monitor showing the
squiggly waves of Zook’s irregular heartbeat.
Like some weird sci-fi melding of heaven and high-tech Earth, the
musician strummed serenely on her 4-foot Irish harp just a few feet
away, while the patient snored and her doctor silently examined the
ups and downs of rainbow-colored heart waves on the screen.
The music sounded lovely — but it was meant to help heal, not
entertain.
Zook suffers from atrial fibrillation, a fast, irregular heartbeat
caused by mixed-up electrical signals generated by the heart’s upper
chambers. Zook’s symptoms include unnerving palpitations and
troubling fatigue that make her suddenly collapse without warning.
Her doctor, Abraham Kocheril, chief of cardiac electrophysiology at
the Carle Heart Center in Urbana, says he has found signs that harp
music might help sick hearts like Zook’s beat more normally.
Playing the heart into rhythm
The theory is based partly on work by Dr. Ary Goldberger of Harvard
Medical School showing that varied rhythms created by healthy hearts
are similar to note patterns in classical music.
Kocheril’s work also fits with a growing music therapy movement,
whose supporters believe music can alleviate some of the mental and
physical symptoms of disease.
“People know that music relaxes you. We’re just trying to get more
medical validation,” said Kocheril’s harpist and co-researcher, Dr.
Jennifer MacKinnon, 35, a Chicago internist. She took up
harp-playing at age 10 and as a child, used to play for patients of
her father, also a physician.
Some enthusiasts believe the harp has special healing qualities and
Kocheril said resonant vibrations from live harp music may be
particularly effective at regulating quivering heart rhythms. Other
musical instruments and recorded music might offer similar benefits,
he said, making a “music prescription” easier to follow.
“Potentially, there could be a prescription for music five days a
week ... to keep the heart healthy in general and specifically to
keep rhythm disorders under control,” Kocheril said.
New tool for hospitals?
While he doesn’t foresee the elegant but unwieldy harp becoming a
routine fixture during heart operations, others have used harpists
in intensive-care units to help normalize sick newborns’ heart
rates, after surgery to reduce patients’ anxiety, and during
childbirth to soothe mothers in labor.
Psychologist and harpist Sarajane Williams uses the instrument to
help patients deal with chronic pain from arthritis, fibromyalgia
and other conditions.
Patients at her Macungie, Pa., office sit in a reclining chair
embedded with speakers that allow amplified vibrations from her
harp-playing to reach deep into aching tissue like “a musical
massage,” Williams said.
She says the vibrations help relieve pain by stimulating circulation
and relaxing patients.
Harp therapy also is commonly used to soothe dying patients in
hospices.
Maureen Reilly, a nurse-anesthetist in San Antonio, Texas, says the
harp’s effect on the body can be partly explained by a physics
principle called entrainment. This concept describes the influence
of one oscillating system over another.
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