Mode
Text Size
Log in / Sign up

Erector spinae plane block combined with general anesthesia altered cutaneous temperature and reduced opioid needs in 31 adult patients undergoing video-assisted thoracoscopic surgeryHeat Map Shows If Your Pain Block Actually Worked

AI-generated summary of the cited source, checked by automated accuracy review. How we work

Key Takeaway
Consider infrared thermography to assess metameric extent of ESPB in video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery, noting observational design limits causal claims.

This prospective observational study evaluated 31 adult patients undergoing video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery. Participants were assigned to receive either an erector spinae plane block (ESPB) combined with general anesthesia or general anesthesia alone. The primary outcome was the detection of cutaneous temperature changes using infrared thermography, while secondary outcomes included intraoperative opioid consumption, postoperative pain scores, and time to first strong opioid requirement.

Results indicated that intraoperative opioid consumption was significantly lower in the ESPB group compared to the comparator group, with a p-value less than 0.05. Infrared thermography detected increased temperatures localized in dermatomes T6 and T7 in the ESPB plus general anesthesia group. Additionally, the need for postoperative opioid rescue occurred later in the ESPB plus general anesthesia group compared to general anesthesia alone.

Safety data regarding adverse events, serious adverse events, discontinuations, or tolerability were not reported in the provided evidence. The study limitations include its prospective observational design, which precludes definitive causal conclusions. The practice relevance notes that infrared thermography monitoring can be considered clinically relevant to assess the metameric extent achieved by the ESPB.

Imagine waking up after surgery feeling calm and pain-free. Now imagine knowing exactly why that happened before you even took a single pill. A new study uses heat cameras to prove it.

Many people face painful surgeries like lung removals. Doctors often use nerve blocks to stop pain. But how do we know if the block worked perfectly?

Current methods rely on guessing. Doctors ask patients to rate their pain. They watch how many painkillers a patient needs. This tells us the result, but not the cause.

Patients suffer unnecessarily when blocks fail. They get more pain and more drugs. We need a better way to check the work before it is done.

The surprising shift

For years, doctors used temperature checks to guess if a nerve block worked. It was just a hunch. This study changes that guess into proof.

But here's the twist. We are not just guessing anymore. We are seeing the heat. When a specific nerve block works, it changes the body's heat map.

What scientists didn't expect

Think of your nerves like a traffic system. Pain is a jam. A nerve block is a detour sign. Usually, we only see the traffic after the fact.

This time, we see the detour happen in real time. The study used infrared cameras. These cameras see heat that our eyes cannot.

When the block works, it blocks certain signals. This causes a specific area of skin to get warmer. It is like turning off a heater in one room while the rest stays cool.

Researchers looked at thirty-one adults. They were getting video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery. This is a common operation for lung issues.

Half the group got general anesthesia alone. The other half got anesthesia plus a special nerve block called an erector spinae plane block.

Doctors took pictures of their skin temperature before surgery. They took more pictures right after. They also tracked how much pain medicine was used.

The heat cameras showed a clear difference. The group with the nerve block had warmer skin in specific spots. These spots matched the nerves being treated.

This proves the block covered the right area. It showed exactly how far the medicine spread.

The group with the block used less pain medicine during surgery. They reported less pain after waking up. They did not need strong opioids as soon as the others.

But there's a catch.

This technology is not in every hospital yet. It requires special cameras and training. Not all doctors have this equipment today.

Where this fits in the bigger picture

Experts say this is a huge step forward. It turns a vague feeling into clear data. It helps doctors adjust their technique on the spot.

If a block does not spread enough, the doctor can fix it immediately. This prevents a bad day of pain later.

You might not see this in your surgery tomorrow. It is still in the research phase. However, it shows what is possible.

Talk to your doctor about pain management options. Ask if they use nerve blocks. Ask how they check if it worked.

This study had a small group of people. It only looked at one type of surgery. The cameras are expensive and not everywhere.

More research is needed to make this standard. Hospitals will need to buy the cameras. Doctors will need to learn how to read the heat maps.

It will take time. But the goal is clear. We want patients to wake up comfortable. We want to know exactly why. Heat maps give us that answer.

Study Details

Study typeCohort
EvidenceLevel 3
PublishedApr 2026
View Original Abstract ↓
Objective assessment of the success and spread of interfascial plane blocks remains challenging. Infrared thermography may offer a non-invasive method to evaluate erector spinae plane block (ESPB) by detecting cutaneous temperature changes related to sympathetic blockade. In this prospective observational study, adult patients undergoing video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery were allocated to either general anesthesia alone or ESPB combined with general anesthesia. Infrared thermographic imaging was performed preoperatively and postoperatively. Intraoperative opioid consumption, postoperative pain scores, and time to first strong opioid requirement were recorded. Thirty-one patients were analyzed. Intraoperative opioid consumption was significantly lower in the ESPB group (p  In the ESPB + GA group, infrared thermography detected increased postoperative temperatures localized in dermatomes T6 and T7, consistent with sympathetic effects related to the erector spinae plane block (ESPB) used in VATS; therefore, infrared thermography monitoring can be considered clinically relevant and it can be used to assess the metameric extent achieved by ESPB; in addition, the ESPB + GA group showed a reduction in the need for intraoperative opioids, better postoperative analgesia, and a later need for postoperative opioid rescue.
Free Newsletter

Clinical research that matters. Delivered to your inbox.

Join thousands of clinicians and researchers. No spam, unsubscribe anytime.