Music can be a viable option in reducing anxiety before surgery

Music is a viable alternative to sedative medications in reducing patient anxiety prior to an anesthesia procedure, according to a Penn Medicine study published in the journal Regional Anesthesia & Pain Medicine. 

doctor wearing white coat and stethoscope strums a ukelele.

A peripheral nerve block procedure is a type of regional anesthesia—done in the preoperative area under ultrasound guidance—that blocks sensations of pain from a specific area of the body. The procedure is routinely performed for a variety of outpatient orthopedic surgeries, such as hip and knee arthroscopies and elbow or hand surgeries. To reduce anxiety, which can lead to prolonged recovery and an increase in postoperative pain, patients commonly take sedative medications, like midazolam, prior to the nerve block procedure. Yet, the medications can have side effects, including breathing issues and paradoxical effects like hostility and agitation. In this study, researchers found a track of relaxing music to be similarly effective to the intravenous form of midazolam in reducing a patient’s anxiety prior to the procedure. 

“Our findings show that there are drug-free alternatives to help calm a patient before certain procedures, like nerve blocks,” says the study’s lead author Veena Graff, an assistant professor of anesthesiology and critical care. “We’ve rolled out a new process at our ambulatory surgical center to provide patients who want to listen to music with access to disposable headphones. Ultimately, our goal is to offer music as an alternative to help patients relax during their perioperative period.”

Read more at Penn Medicine News.