Listening to fast classical music significantly increased mean heart rate from 75.7 to 83.0 bpm, while slow classical music decreased it to 72.6 bpm.
Observational (n=100)
No
Does listening to fast and slow classical music alter heart rate, blood pressure, and mood in human subjects?
Fast classical music acutely increases heart rate and blood pressure while slow classical music decreases them, highlighting the autonomic impact of music tempo.
Tasa de eventos absoluta: 83% vs 75.7%
valor p: p=<0.05
Anxiety and depression have deleterious effects on health. Numerous studies have demonstrated the negative impact of emotions such as stress and anxiety on heart rate (HR), blood pressure (BP), and heart disease. These mood states have been linked to stroke, heart failure, diabetes, heart disease, respiratory problems, and drug abuse. Negative emotions can affect the HR and BP through the link between the nervous system and the cardiovascular system. Our study demonstrates the positive effect of classical music on HR, BP parameters, and mood states.
Darki et al. (Wed,) conducted a observational in Healthy volunteers (n=100). Classical music (fast and slow) vs. Resting baseline was evaluated on Mean heart rate (bpm) after fast music (p=<0.05). Listening to fast classical music significantly increased mean heart rate from 75.7 to 83.0 bpm, while slow classical music decreased it to 72.6 bpm.
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