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Erector Spinae Plane (ESP) Block Volunteer Study

A Volunteer Study to Determine the Anesthetic and Analgesic Effect of the Erector Spinae Plane (ESP) Block

Status
Active, not recruiting
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT04401007
Enrollment
24
Registered
2020-05-26
Start date
2021-07-28
Completion date
2024-12-31
Last updated
2024-07-23

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Pain Management

Brief summary

Although erector spinae plane (ESP) block reportedly provides postoperative pain relieve, controversy remains regarding the accuracy and consistency of analgesic success following ESP block. The goal of this study is to determine the extent and duration of clinical neural blockade following an ESP injection with different local anesthetic doses. Methods Twenty four healthy volunteers will be recruited, and each subject will make 2 separate visits to the study centre to undergo intervention and assessment. The 2 study visits will be separated by an interval of at least 2 weeks to ensure complete washout of any residual effects and a return to baseline status. At each study visit, the subject will receive a unilateral ESP block with 1.5% lidocaine and 5 mcg/mL epinephrine. Two different local anesthetic volumes will be investigated: 20 mL (300 mg lidocaine) at one study visit and 30 mL (450 mg lidocaine) at the other study visit. Volunteers will be randomized to one of two intervention groups: (1) Group 20/30: A unilateral ESP block with 20 mL of local anesthetic at the first visit, and 30 mL of local anesthetic at the second visit; or (2) Group 30/20: a unilateral ESP block with 30 mL of 1.5% lidocaine with 1/200,000 epinephrine at the first visit, and 20 mL of the same local anesthetic solution at the second visit. There will be 2 study subgroups based on the vertebral level at which the ESP block is administered: (1) Volunteer subjects in subgroup TP4 will receive the ESP block injection at the T4 transverse process (TP4) level in order to evaluate the anesthetic effect on the chest wall. (2) Volunteers in subgroup TP8 will receive the ESP block injection at the T8 transverse process (TP8) level in order to evaluate the anesthetic effect on the abdominal wall. The first 10 volunteer subjects recruited will receive ESP blocks at the TP4 level and the subsequent 10 subjects will receive ESP blocks at the TP8 level.

Detailed description

Erector spinae plane (ESP) block is a new regional nerve block technique that involves a percutaneous injection of local anesthetic as a bolus through a needle or catheter into the fascial plane between the erector spinae muscle and the transverse processes in the upper or mid back. Injection at the level of the T4-5 transverse process is indicated for chest wall pain relief while injection at the T8-9 level is for abdominal wall pain control. This block aims to relieve postoperative pain but is not intended to provide anesthetic blockade for surgery. Preliminary case reports and some randomized controlled trials show encouraging analgesic effect of ESP block for breast surgery, rib fracture, thoracotomy, sternotomy, epigastric hernia repair, open abdominal surgery, laparoscopic abdominal surgery, radical retropubic prostatectomy and hip arthroplasty. Although effective, controversy remains regarding the accuracy and consistency of analgesic success following ESP block. Currently, it is unclear whether block inconsistency is due to improper injection technique or the mechanism of action. Presumably, local anesthetic following an ESP block injection will find its way antero-medially through the costotransverse foramen and / or inter transverse ligaments to enter the thoracic paravertebral space or epidural space to block the ventral rami of the thoracic spinal nerves. It may also spread laterally to reach the neighbouring intercostal nerves. At this time, it is unclear whether cadaver injection studies showing dye spread to these anatomical spaces can fully explain the observed clinical neural blockade. Also a number of cadaver studies show inconsistent and conflicting dye spread results, i.e., failure to reach the thoracic paravertebral space. Although some suggest that an ESP block also provides sympathetic blockade thus may provide visceral pain relief, no study has evaluated the validity of such a claim or the extent of sympathetic blockade. The mechanisms of action for an ESP block are currently unclear. Although most case reports describe analgesic effects of ESP block for anterior chest and abdominal surgery presumably as a result of blockade of the ventral rami of the spinal nerves in the thoracic paravertebral spaces, it is more likely that local anesthetic injected in the ESP will reliably anesthetize the dorsal rami traversing the erector spinae muscle in the back. This is supported by preliminary clinical analgesic success of ESP block for thoracic spine surgery and lumbar spine surgery. The consistency of blocking the ventral and dorsal rami following an ESP block injection is unknown at this time. Investigators' clinical experience further confirms that an ESP injection provides variable analgesic results and an objective sign of sensory anesthesia to pinprick or ice is not consistently evident. Currently no study has examined the optimal technique of ESP block injection, peak blood local anesthetic level after injection, the effect of spine movement (i.e., gliding movement of erector spinae muscle on the transverse processes) on neural blockade, and the consistency of this block technique. Also, most case reports on surgical patients did not report the onset, progression or resolution of ESP blockade or the extent of sensory and sympathetic blockade. From a clinical perspective, it would be very helpful to determine the extent and duration of clinical neural blockade following an ESP injection with different local anesthetic doses and such detailed examination is possible only in a carefully conducted volunteer study.

Interventions

Erector spinae plane (ESP) block is a new regional nerve block technique that involves a percutaneous injection of local anesthetic as a bolus through a needle or catheter into the fascial plane between the erector spinae muscle and the transverse processes in the upper or mid back.

Sponsors

University Health Network, Toronto
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
CROSSOVER
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE (Subject, Investigator)

Masking description

Two different local anesthetic volumes will be investigated: 20 mL (300 mg lidocaine) at one study visit and 30 mL (450 mg lidocaine) at the other study visit. Volunteers will be randomized to one of two intervention groups: (1) Group 20/30: A unilateral ESP block with 20 mL of local anesthetic at the first visit, and 30 mL of local anesthetic at the second visit; or (2) Group 30/20: a unilateral ESP block with 30 mL of 1.5% lidocaine with 1/200,000 epinephrine at the first visit, and 20 mL of the same local anesthetic solution at the second visit. Randomization of subjects to either Group 20/30 or Group 30/20 will be done using computer software and only the study investigator performing the ESP block will be aware of the study allocation. Volunteer subjects and the study investigators responsible for serial neurologic and other outcome assessments after injection will be blinded to the volume of local anesthetic injected.

Intervention model description

There will be 2 study subgroups based on the vertebral level at which the ESP block is administered: (1) Volunteer subjects in subgroup TP4 will receive the ESP block injection at the T4 transverse process (TP4) level. Injection at the TP4 level will allow us to evaluate the anesthetic effect on the chest wall. (2) Volunteers in subgroup TP8 will receive the ESP block injection at the T8 transverse process (TP8) level. Injection at the TP8 level will allow us to evaluate the anesthetic effect on the abdominal wall. The first 12 volunteer subjects recruited will receive ESP blocks at the TP4 level and the subsequent 12 subjects will receive ESP blocks at the TP8 level.

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 50 Years
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

* ASA 1 (normal healthy) volunteers * 18 - 50 years of age * 60- 100 kg weight * English speaking * female volunteers of childbearing potential will be required to provide a negative pregnancy test before being allowed to participate, females of child bearing potential must be willing to use medically acceptable birth control methods for a minimum of 2 weeks following the nerve block.

Exclusion criteria

* weight \< 60 kg (limited by the maximum lidocaine dose 7 mg/kg) * medical disorders (including bleeding disorders) * any recreational drug use * allergy to local anesthetic (lidocaine, bupivacaine, ropivacaine) * contraindication to regional anesthetic block * inability to provide informed consent * baseline abnormality of chest, abdominal and back sensation * pregnancy / breast feeding * individuals with mental health disorders (for example bipolar disorder or depression).

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
the duration of sensory blockade Sensation to Pinprick of thoracic ventral ramiup to 10 hoursduration of ESP block Sensation to Pinprick
the duration of sensory blockade Sensation to Pinprick of thoracic dorsal ramiup to 10 hoursduration of ESP block Sensation to Pinprick
the duration of sensory blockade Sensation to temperature of thoracic ventral ramiup to 10 hoursduration of ESP block Sensation to different temperature
the duration of sensory blockade Sensation to temperature of thoracic dorsal ramiup to 10 hoursduration of ESP block Sensation to different temperature

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
To evaluate the success of blockade on Skin Conductance of an ESP block injection0-2 hourspost-block success of blockade on Skin Conductance
To evaluate the onset of pinprick blockade of an ESP block injectionup to 2 hoursonset of ESP block on pinprick
To evaluate the regression of blockade on Skin Conductance of an ESP block injectionpost-block 2-10hoursthe regression of blockade on Skin Conductance
To evaluate the onset of blockade on Skin Conductance of an ESP block injectionpost-block 0-2 hoursthe onset of blockade on Skin Conductance
To evaluate the onset of temperature blockade of an ESP blockup to 2 hoursonset of ESP block on temperature
To evaluate the regression of pinprick blockade of an ESP block injectionpost-block 2-10 hoursregression of the ESP block on pinprick
To evaluate the regression of temperature blockade of an ESP block injectionpost-block 2-10 hoursregression of the ESP block on Skin Conductance

Countries

Canada

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026