This perspective article addresses the critical and up-to-date problem of task-specific musician’s dystonia (MD) from both theoretical and practical perspectives. Theoretically, MD is explored as a result of impaired sensorimotor interplay across different brain circuits, supported by the most frequently cited scientific evidence—each referenced dozens of times in Scopus. Practically, MD is a significant issue as it occurs over 60 times more frequently in musicians compared to other professions, underscoring the influence of individual training as well as environmental, social, and emotional factors. To address these challenges, we propose a novel application of the FeeSyCy principle (feedback-synchrony-plasticity), which emphasizes the pivotal role of feedback in guiding inter-neuronal synchronization and plasticity—the foundation of learning and memory. This model integrates with established literature to form a comprehensive framework for understanding MD as an impaired FeeSyCy-mediated relationship between the individual and their environment, ultimately leading to trauma. The proposed approach provides significant advantages by enabling the development of innovative therapeutic and preventive strategies. Specifically, it lays the groundwork for multimodal psycho-physical therapies aimed at restoring balance in the neural circuits affected by MD. These strategies include personalized psychotherapy combined with physical rehabilitation to address both the psychological and physiological dimensions of MD. This integration offers a practical and value-added solution to this pressing problem, with potential for broad applicability across similar conditions.

Grifoni, J., Crispiatico, V., Castagna, A., Converti, R., Ramella, M., Quartarone, A., et al. (2025). Musician’s dystonia: a perspective on the strongest evidence towards new prevention and mitigation treatments. FRONTIERS IN NETWORK PHYSIOLOGY, 4 [10.3389/fnetp.2024.1508592].

Musician’s dystonia: a perspective on the strongest evidence towards new prevention and mitigation treatments

Crispiatico V.;
2025

Abstract

This perspective article addresses the critical and up-to-date problem of task-specific musician’s dystonia (MD) from both theoretical and practical perspectives. Theoretically, MD is explored as a result of impaired sensorimotor interplay across different brain circuits, supported by the most frequently cited scientific evidence—each referenced dozens of times in Scopus. Practically, MD is a significant issue as it occurs over 60 times more frequently in musicians compared to other professions, underscoring the influence of individual training as well as environmental, social, and emotional factors. To address these challenges, we propose a novel application of the FeeSyCy principle (feedback-synchrony-plasticity), which emphasizes the pivotal role of feedback in guiding inter-neuronal synchronization and plasticity—the foundation of learning and memory. This model integrates with established literature to form a comprehensive framework for understanding MD as an impaired FeeSyCy-mediated relationship between the individual and their environment, ultimately leading to trauma. The proposed approach provides significant advantages by enabling the development of innovative therapeutic and preventive strategies. Specifically, it lays the groundwork for multimodal psycho-physical therapies aimed at restoring balance in the neural circuits affected by MD. These strategies include personalized psychotherapy combined with physical rehabilitation to address both the psychological and physiological dimensions of MD. This integration offers a practical and value-added solution to this pressing problem, with potential for broad applicability across similar conditions.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
feedback synchrony plasticity: the FeeSyCy principle governing networks; multi-sensory multimodal rehabilitation; network physiology; psychic trauma; sensory-motor integration; task-specific focal dystonia;
English
22-gen-2025
2025
4
1508592
open
Grifoni, J., Crispiatico, V., Castagna, A., Converti, R., Ramella, M., Quartarone, A., et al. (2025). Musician’s dystonia: a perspective on the strongest evidence towards new prevention and mitigation treatments. FRONTIERS IN NETWORK PHYSIOLOGY, 4 [10.3389/fnetp.2024.1508592].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/573482
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