Health Research Digest with Leo and Eva

This Simple Health Hack Helped Adults See Better Heart Readings

15 min · 18 de jul de 2026
Portada del episodio This Simple Health Hack Helped Adults See Better Heart Readings

Descripción

In a randomised controlled trial published in the Journal of Clinical Hypertension, researchers from Monash University and Hiroshima University studied 30 pre-hypertensive young adults. One group listened to gentle piano and flute relaxing music for 30 minutes daily, five days a week, for four weeks. Scientists measured systolic blood pressure, diastolic pressure, and heart rate before and after using a digital monitor, averaging three readings each time. The music group recorded a significant 8.73 mmHg drop in systolic pressure and 6.42 bpm reduction in heart rate, while the control group showed almost no change. These clear physiological shifts suggest regular listening to relaxing music may support natural regulation of blood pressure and heart rate by promoting deeper calm. Read the full post to see the complete evidence and easy daily habits. https://oriems.fit/blogs/research-digest/music-lowers-blood-pressure-heart-rate

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episode This Simple Health Hack Helped Adults See Better Heart Readings artwork

This Simple Health Hack Helped Adults See Better Heart Readings

In a randomised controlled trial published in the Journal of Clinical Hypertension, researchers from Monash University and Hiroshima University studied 30 pre-hypertensive young adults. One group listened to gentle piano and flute relaxing music for 30 minutes daily, five days a week, for four weeks. Scientists measured systolic blood pressure, diastolic pressure, and heart rate before and after using a digital monitor, averaging three readings each time. The music group recorded a significant 8.73 mmHg drop in systolic pressure and 6.42 bpm reduction in heart rate, while the control group showed almost no change. These clear physiological shifts suggest regular listening to relaxing music may support natural regulation of blood pressure and heart rate by promoting deeper calm. Read the full post to see the complete evidence and easy daily habits. https://oriems.fit/blogs/research-digest/music-lowers-blood-pressure-heart-rate

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Music Training Restores Brain Function and Social Skills After Traumatic Injury

Norwegian scientists tested music-supported piano training on seven patients with mild traumatic brain injury two years post-injury. They measured outcomes with CVLT cognitive tests, social interviews, training logs, task fMRI, and resting-state fMRI analysed via dynamic causal modelling. Evidence showed major memory gains, stronger orbitofrontal cortex connectivity, and six of seven patients returning to work with better well-being after eight weeks averaging three hours weekly. These results prove repeated stimulation drives neuroplasticity and functional recovery. Similar targeted approaches with electrical muscle stimulation (EMS) may help support muscle activation and rehabilitation progress. Published in Frontiers in Human Neuroscience by University of Bergen experts, this peer-reviewed study from Norway is fully credible. Read the full blog post for complete brain scan data and practical recovery insights. https://oriems.fit/blogs/research-digest/music-brain-injury-recovery

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Italian researchers ran a careful randomized controlled study with 40 older adults undergoing knee replacement surgery. One group listened to binaural beats (4 Hz) through headphones before their operation, while the control group heard a steady tone. Doctors then objectively measured real morphine use via patient-controlled pumps during the first postoperative day. The binaural beats group consumed just 5.75 mg compared with 11.85 mg in the control group — nearly half as much. Published in a respected peer-reviewed journal from a proper Italian hospital department, this trustworthy evidence suggests gentle sound stimulation may help reduce morphine needs after surgery. Read the full story to see what it means for everyday music listening and recovery. https://oriems.fit/blogs/research-digest/binaural-beats-reduce-morphine-use-surgery

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