J 2022

Tactile Low Frequency Vibration in Dementia Management: A Scoping Review

CAMPBELL, Elsa A., Jiri KANTOR, Lucia KANTOROVÁ, Zuzana SVOBODOVA, Thomas WOSCH et. al.

Basic information

Original name

Tactile Low Frequency Vibration in Dementia Management: A Scoping Review

Authors

CAMPBELL, Elsa A. (guarantor), Jiri KANTOR (203 Czech Republic), Lucia KANTOROVÁ (703 Slovakia, belonging to the institution), Zuzana SVOBODOVA (203 Czech Republic) and Thomas WOSCH (276 Germany)

Edition

Frontiers in psychology, LAUSANNE, Frontiers Media, 2022, 1664-1078

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Článek v odborném periodiku

Field of Study

30230 Other clinical medicine subjects

Country of publisher

Switzerland

Confidentiality degree

není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství

References:

Impact factor

Impact factor: 3.800

RIV identification code

RIV/00216224:14110/22:00128421

Organization unit

Faculty of Medicine

UT WoS

000820839200001

Keywords in English

low frequency vibration; dementia; vibroacoustic; whole body vibration; scoping review

Tags

International impact, Reviewed
Změněno: 31/1/2023 09:13, Mgr. Tereza Miškechová

Abstract

V originále

The prevalence of dementia is increasing with the ever-growing population of older adults. Non-pharmacological, music-based interventions, including sensory stimulation, were reported by the Lancet Commission in 2020 to be the first-choice approach for managing the behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia. Low frequency sinusoidal vibration interventions, related to music interventions through their core characteristics, may offer relief for these symptoms. Despite increasing attention on the effectiveness of auditory music interventions and music therapy for managing dementia, this has not included low frequency vibration. This scoping review, following the JBI methodology guidelines, was conducted to investigate participants' responses to both sound and mechanical vibration, the characteristics of the delivered interventions, methodological challenges, and the specifics of the research experiments reported. An extensive search was conducted in BMC, CINAHL, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, EMBASE, ERIC, MEDLINE (OvidSP), Pedro, ProQuest Central, PsycINFO, Scopus, and Web of Science. Current Controlled Trials, Clinical Trials, and Google Scholar were also searched as well as a hand search in relevant journals. Studies on adults with all types of dementia, investigating tactile low frequency sound or mechanical vibration in any context were considered. Data from eight full-length studies (three RCTs, two quasi-experimental, two case reports, and one qualitative) were extracted using the data extraction table developed by the authors and were included in the analysis and critical appraisal. Issues in quality related to, for example, control groups and blinding. Few studies addressed participants' subjective responses to the interventions. Reporting on the intervention characteristics was unclear. It appeared more frequent sessions led to better outcomes and home-based interventions potentially addressing the issue of access and feasibility. Future research should include neuroimaging to measure and confirm the hypothesised mechanism of cerebral coherence. Standardised reporting of intervention characteristics is also needed to ensure replicability of the experiments. Higher quality research is needed to investigate the impact and effect of low frequency vibration for the symptoms of dementia and compare outcomes in meta-syntheses.