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- Tao Shan, Xiaodan Zhang, Zhenyu Zhao, Xiao Zhou, Hongguang Bao, Chuan Su, Qilian Tan, Liu Han, and Jun Yin.
- Department of Anaesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine, Nanjing First Hospital, Nanjing Medical University, Nanjing, China.
- Br J Anaesth. 2025 Jan 8.
BackgroundSpread of local anaesthetic solution in the paravertebral space after erector spinae plane block (ESPB) is variable. We evaluated whether paravertebral spread of local anaesthetic is affected by patient position after ESPB.MethodsWe randomised 84 patients to receive ESPB at T7 with a mixture of 0.375% ropivacaine and radiocontrast dye (30 ml). Participants were positioned supine, prone, or lateral for 30 min after ESPB before computed tomography scanning. The primary outcome was paravertebral space local anaesthetic spread, with secondary assessments of craniocaudal spread and distribution to neural foramina, and intercostal and epidural spaces. Loss of sensation to cold was recorded.ResultsLocal anaesthetic-contrast mix reached the paravertebral space, intercostal space, and neural foramina in 96.5%, 94.2%, and 77.9% of individuals, respectively. Epidural space spread occurred in 20 cases. Prone positioning consistently allowed paravertebral and intercostal spread in all patients, with more thoracic level spread compared with supine positioning (5.0 [1.9] vs 3.1 [1.7], difference [95% confidence interval, CI]: 1.9 [0.8-3.0] levels, P<0.001 for paravertebral space spread; 2.8 [1.9] vs 1.4 [1.4], difference [95% CI] levels: 1.4 [0.4-2.5], P=0.004 for neural foramina spread; 4.3 [1.3] vs 3.2 [1.5], difference [95% CI] levels: 1.0 [0.1-1.9], P=0.019 for intercostal space spread). Local anaesthetic-contrast extended to the intercostal space further in the prone than in the lateral position group (4.3 [1.3] vs 2.6 [1.5] thoracic levels, difference [95% CI]: 1.7 [0.8-2.6], P<0.001). Sensory block in ventral dermatomes was variable in all participants.ConclusionsProne positioning after ESPB significantly enhanced local anaesthetic-contrast spread to the paravertebral space, intercostal space, and neural foramina, suggesting that gravity plays a substantial role in spread.Clinical Trial RegistrationClinical Trials.gov (NCT06142630).Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.
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