Listening to a soothing Mozart symphony may significantly lower blood pressure and heart rate, a new study has claimed. The study of the effect of different musical genres on the cardiovascular system found that the music of Mozart and Strauss is able to lower blood lipid concentrations and the heart rate.
Researchers Hans-Joachim Trappe and Gabriele Volt of Ruhr University Bochum in Germany considered 120 study participants: half of the subjects were exposed to music for 25 minutes.
Subdivided into three groups they were played recorded music by either W A Mozart, J Strauss Jr, or the pop band ABBA. The remaining 60 subjects were allocated to a control group that spent their time in silence.
Before and after exposure to music and quiet time, respectively, all participants had their blood pressure, heart rate and cortisol concentration measured. Classical music by Mozart
and Strauss notably lowered blood pressure and heart rate, whereas no substantial effect was seen for the songs of ABBA.
In the control group, resting in a supine position, or lying with the face up, also resulted in blood pressure lowering, but the effect was far less pronounced than for exposure to the music of Mozart or Strauss. All musical genres resulted in notably lower cortisol concentrations, researchers said.
As far as cortisol concentrations were concerned, the sex of the participants must have played a part, because the drop in cortisol levels was more pronounced in men than in women, especially after exposure to the music of Mozart and Strauss, they said.
Comparison with the control group showed that the effect of music was far greater than that of silence.
The study was published in the journal Deutsches Arzteblatt International.