Transplanting Hearts Accompanied By Verdi And Mozart Poem by gershon hepner

Transplanting Hearts Accompanied By Verdi And Mozart



TRANSPLANTING HEARTS ACCOMPANIED BY VERDI AND MOZART


Mice who've had their hearts transplanted
live longer if they listen to La Traviata.
By Mozart, too they are enchanted.
A love relationship that is a heart-to-hearter
may be prolonged perhaps, if mu-
sically fortified, so when you give your heart
to someone you are loving you
should be accompanied by Verdi and Mozart.

Dennis Bartel reported the news below on KUSC this morning:

Classical Music Boosts Heart Transplant Survival in Mice
Japanese researchers report mice who underwent heart transplants survived much longer if they were exposed to Mozart or Verdi.
By Tom Jacobs

Music may or may not mend a broken heart. But newly published research suggests that, at least in mice, it can reduce rejection of heart transplants.
Writing in the Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery, a team of Japanese researchers led by Dr. Masanori Nimi describe an experiment in which a group of 8- to 12-week-old mice underwent heart transplants. The rodents were randomly assigned to one of five groups:
Those exposed to opera (a recording of Verdi's La Traviata, conducted by Sir Georg Solti): instrumental music by Mozart; New Age music (The Best of Enya): no music; or "one of six different sound frequencies."
After one week, the mice whose personal soundtrack featured Enya, one of the sound frequencies, or no music at all "rejected their grafts acutely, " the researchers report. Their hearts gave out 7.5 to 11 days after the transplant. In contrast, those exposed to Verdi or Mozart "had significantly prolonged survival, " the researchers report. Median survival times were 26.5 days for those who heard Verdi and 20 days for those exposed to Mozart.

In explaining the results, the researchers point to the immune system. They report exposure to classical music generated regulatory cells, which suppress immune responses and are thus vital to preventing rejection of a transplanted organ. "It appears possible that opera-induced regulatory cells may inhibit immune responses against allografts, " they write. Other possible causes include "the effects on brain function produced by the specific harmony and/or other features of the music itself, " and "a decrease in postoperative stress brought about by exposure to music."

In any event, this provides more evidence that classical music has a health-inducing impact on the body — one that was, at least for this group of mice, literally life-prolonging.

I sent the poem to Dennis Bartel, asking him whether he thought that poetry would also prolong the lives of heart-transplanted mice. His response was:

Not unless the poetry was in micese.

3/23/12 #9666

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