# Effects of Preferred Music on Pain Tolerance During an Experimental Cold Pressor Test: A Pilot Study

**Authors:** Henry Francisco, Udoka Okpalauwaekwe, Stephan Milosavljevic

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.101397 · Cureus · 2026-01-12

## TL;DR

Listening to preferred music can increase pain tolerance during a cold pressor test, suggesting it may be a useful non-drug method for managing pain in rehabilitation.

## Contribution

This pilot study demonstrates that self-selected preferred music can significantly delay pain perception in a controlled experimental setting.

## Key findings

- Preferred music increased average time-to-pain perception from 33.8 s to 56.2 s during the cold pressor task.
- 17 out of 20 participants showed increased pain tolerance when listening to preferred music.
- Pain intensity ratings remained unchanged across all trial conditions.

## Abstract

Background

Preferred music has shown promise as a non-pharmacologic strategy for modulating pain, yet its effects in controlled laboratory environments relevant to rehabilitation practice remain underexplored. This pilot study examined whether listening to self-selected preferred music influences pain perception during an experimental cold pressor task.

Methods

Twenty healthy adults (mean age: 35.4 years) completed six cold pressor cycles in a repeated-measures design: two pre-music trials, two preferred-music trials, and two post-music trials. During each trial, participants immersed their non-dominant hand in 0°C water until the first pain perception. Outcomes included time-to-pain perception (seconds) and pain intensity (10-cm Visual Analogue Scale). Friedman’s test with Wilcoxon post-hoc comparisons analyzed non-normally distributed time-to-pain data, while repeated-measures ANOVA evaluated normally distributed pain intensity scores.

Results

Preferred music significantly increased pain tolerance. Mean time-to-pain perception rose from 33.8 s (pre-music) to 56.2 s during preferred-music trials, decreasing to 45.4 s post-music. The overall effect of the condition was significant (χ²(2) = 15.6, p < .001). Post-hoc tests showed significantly greater tolerance during preferred-music trials compared with both pre-music (p = 0.001) and post-music (p = 0.001) conditions, with 17 of 20 participants demonstrating increased tolerance. Pain intensity ratings did not differ significantly across conditions (F(2, 38) = 0.561, p > 0.05).

Conclusion

Preferred music meaningfully delayed pain onset during the cold pressor test (CPT) but did not alter perceived pain intensity. These findings support preferred music as a simple, low-cost strategy that may enhance pain tolerance and patient engagement during rehabilitation activities. Larger, clinically focused studies are needed to clarify mechanisms, the durability of effects, and real-world therapeutic applications.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Pain (MESH:D010146)
- **Chemicals:** water (MESH:D014867)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

21 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12900911/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12900911