Corene P. Hurt, MM, MT-BC, Ruth R. Rice, MS, PT, Gerald C. McIntosh, Michael H. Thaut, PhD, RMT; Rhythmic Auditory Stimulation in Gait Training for Patients with Traumatic Brain Injury. J Music Ther 1998; 35 (4): 228-241. doi: 10.1093/jmt/35.4.228
Rhythmic auditory stimulation (RAS) was studied in a frequency entrainment design and as a therapeutic stimulus to facilitate gait patterns in 8 traumatically brain injured individuals (5 male/3 female; mean age 30 ± 5 years) with persisting gait disorder, 4–24 months postinjury During entrainment, with RAS frequency matched to baseline cadence, velocity and stride symmetry both increased by an average of 18%. Increases contributing to the velocity improvement were seen in both stride length (7%) and cadence (8%). With RAS acceterated 5% over the fast walking step rate of the patients, 5 patients could entrain to a higher step frequency. The 2 patients with the slowest baseline gait velocity could not entrain to faster RAS frequencies. After 5 weeks of daily RAS training, 5 patients' mean velocity increased significantly (p < .05) by 51% (38.8 m/min to 57.6 m/min; p < .43). Cadence (+16%) and stride length (+29%) also showed statistically significant improvement. Stride symmetry improved nonsignificantly by 12%.