AMT
ACADEMIC
MUSIC
THERAPY
FORUM
AMT
    
 HOME
 SITE MAP
  FORUM
  CHRONOMEDICINE
 Music Physiology
 Periodic Duration
 Pain Sensitivity
 Activity Rhythms
 Cosmic Rhythms
 Three Way Strcture
 Endogenous Rhythms
 Muscular Rhythms
 Pain Wave Rrhythms
 Circulation & Respiration
 Puls Breath Frequency
 Rhythms in Sleep
 Therapeutic Changes
 Inhalation & Heart Period
 Mother & Child
 Heart & Arterial Oscillation
 Phase Coordination
 Walk & Heart Rhythm
 Breathing & Heart Rhythm
 Autonomic Rhythm
 Hierarchy of Rhythms
 Spontaneous Rhythms
 Muscular Blood Circulation
 Healing & Resistance
 Spontaneous Rhythms
 Conclusion
 Literature
 
 FORUM
 Music as a Harmonic
 Medical Data Carrier
 Nature’s Laws
 of Harmony in the
 Microcosm of Music
 
 Medical Music
 
Preparations on CD
 International Experts
 International Congresses
 MAIN LINKS
 

 

 

Illustration 15

Frequency distributions of 100 R-Point starting in the ECG of a pregnant woman over the foetal heart rate measured in the ECG by R-Point to R-Point and divided into 20 classes of 5% of the heart periodic duration.

Below: Frequency distributions of the foetal R-Point, starting with the mother's heart period during the same test. The measurements were carried out during the nocturnal sleep of the pregnant women. The Chi-square-values refer to the deviation of the class frequencies of the average expected value (hatched horizontal).

(According to HILDEBRANDT and KLEIN 1979)

<<                                                                >>

 

With friendly permission of AAR EDITION
© AAR EDITION INTERNATIONAL 2001

In this context, it should also be of interest that the frequency and phase co-ordination of the heart rhythms of mother and child in the womb also participate in this nocturnal intensification of the rhythmic functional orders. Thus, it could be proven that, while pregnant women were asleep at night, not only is the heart rate ratio of mother and child more strictly adjusted to the whole numbered value of 1:2, but that, at the same time, a phase co-ordination sets in during which the child's heart beat prefers certain phases of its mother’s heart beat. (illustration 15). At the same time, this example makes the functional importance of harmonic co-ordination between rhythmic functions clear, as with correct phase co-ordination, an uneconomical-simultaneous arrival of the mother's and child's pulse waves in the placenta can be avoided.

  Chronobiological Aspects of Music Physiology                                                              continued
Theme: Chronobiological Aspects of Music Physiology –
Biological Rhythms in Humans and their Counterparts in Music