OPINION article
Front. Med.
Sec. Intensive Care Medicine and Anesthesiology
Multistage acupuncture intervention perioperatively: A clinical optimization plan based on the ERAS concept
Provisionally accepted- 1Department of Acupuncture and Tuina, Changchun University of Chinese Medicine, Changchun, Jilin, China
- 2Changchun University of Chinese Medicine, Changchun, China
- 3School of Nursing, Changchun University of Chinese Medicine, Changchun, Jilin, China
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Postoperative mortality within 30 days of surgery is now the third leading cause of death worldwide, resulting in 3.5 million adult deaths each year and surpassed only by ischemic heart disease and stroke (1,2). The substantial medical costs, frequent complications, and elevated mortality rates of the perioperative period collectively establish surgical safety as a critical global public health challenge (3). Consequently, developing systematic perioperative management protocols to lower postoperative morbidity and mortality is a priority for clinical teams (4). Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) represents an evidence-based, multimodal strategy that employs standardized pathways to mitigate surgical stress, reduce complications, shorten hospital stays, and control costs (5).Acupuncture, a cornerstone of traditional Chinese medicine, produces therapeutic effects by stimulating specific acupoints to modulate physiological function. Advances in modern electrophysiology have expanded acupuncture techniques from traditional manual needling and acupressure to include modalities such as electroacupuncture (EA), transcutaneous electrical acupoint stimulation (TEAS), and auricular acupoint electrical stimulation. These innovations have diversified interventional approaches and broadened clinical applications. Perioperative acupuncture can deliver multiple benefits, including preoperative sedation, intraoperative anesthetic sparing, and postoperative analgesia. Such effects help lower postoperative mortality and adverse event rates, which aligns with the objectives of ERAS (6,7). Integrating acupuncture with ERAS to optimize management according to patient needs across the perioperative continuum may therefore extend these benefits to a larger patient population. Preoperative anxiety is a prevalent psychological issue among surgical patients, typically arising from concerns about surgical outcomes and anesthesia efficacy; approximately 40.5% of patients exhibit high anxiety levels (8). This pathological state excessively activates the sympathetic nervous system, elevating catecholamine levels, stimulating the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, and promoting substantial cortisol release (9)(10)(11). Such activation induces stress responses, including increased heart rate, elevated blood pressure, and heightened oxygen consumption, which elevate surgical risk and complicate anesthesia management. Persistent anxiety also suppresses immune function, reducing white blood cell and lymphocyte counts while increasing serum levels of proinflammatory factors such as IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α, and IL-2, thereby raising the risk of intraoperative infection and other postoperative complications (12). Severe preoperative anxiety may further lead patients to delay or cancel surgery, missing the optimal treatment window and adversely affecting long-term quality of life (13).Current clinical management of preoperative anxiety relies primarily on pharmacological and nonpharmacological strategies. The variety of medications administered during the perioperative period itself constitutes an independent risk factor for adverse drug reactions (14). Benzodiazepines, for instance, are commonly used for preoperative anxiolysis but can cause drowsiness and amnesia, potentially prolonging extubation time and impeding early cognitive recovery (15). Consequently, partially or fully replacing pharmacological interventions with effective non-pharmacological methods to reduce medication variety and dosage holds considerable value for patient recovery. As a non-pharmacological therapy, acupuncture alleviates anxiety by activating the vagus nerve, improving autonomic balance through enhanced vagal-sympathetic synchrony, and increasing psychophysiological coherence (16).Substantial evidence now supports the efficacy and safety of acupuncture for reducing preoperative anxiety. Both body and auricular acupuncture demonstrate superior anxiolytic effects compared to benzodiazepines, with no significant difference between the two acupuncture modalities (17). Auricular acupuncture, owing to its simplicity and minimal needling points, offers particular clinical utility. Applying finger pressure, Wangbuluxing seeds, or magnetic beads to auricular points within the vagus nerve distribution-such as Shenmen (TF4), Subcortical (AT4), Cardiac (CO15), and Sympathetic Autonomic (AH6a)-effectively lowers heart rate and blood pressure, thereby alleviating preoperative anxiety (10). Acupoint pressure also reduces anxiety in outpatient surgical patients, facilitating smooth procedures while significantly improving patient satisfaction (18).Adverse reactions like nausea and vomiting occur only rarely. Collectively, acupuncture shows significant efficacy and favorable safety in managing preoperative anxiety (19). These findings indicate that acupuncture can effectively reduce anxiety, minimize perioperative sedative use, and mitigate associated medication risks while ensuring patient safety.3 Intraoperative: Anesthetic Support Anesthesia is critical for ensuring surgical execution and maintaining intraoperative safety, relying on analgesics, sedatives, and muscle relaxants to stabilize vital signs (20). Anesthetic protocols are closely linked to postoperative outcomes: insufficient analgesia can provoke stress responses, disrupt surgery, and hinder recovery, whereas excessive medication may induce neurotoxicity, cognitive impairment, and complications such as postoperative delirium. Optimizing anesthetic strategyensuring adequate depth while controlling drug dosage-is therefore vital for improving prognosis.Acupuncture has been employed in surgical anesthesia for over sixty years, yet used alone it often provides incomplete analgesia, muscle tension, and visceral traction (6). The "needle-drug combined anesthesia" model integrates acupuncture with pharmacological anesthesia to address the limitations of each approach alone, achieving complementary and synergistic effects. This method utilizes acupuncture's physiological regulation and analgesic properties to reduce anesthetic drug requirements while maintaining anesthetic depth, thereby lowering drug-related adverse events and offering substantial clinical value (21).Extensive research shows ( 6) that acupuncture-assisted anesthesia is applied across diverse surgical fields-including cranial, cervical, cardiothoracic, abdominal, anorectal, orthopedic, and obstetric-gynecological procedures-where it effectively reduces intraoperative sedative and analgesic consumption and mitigates physiological stress associated with conventional anesthesia.Within combined acupuncture-pharmacological anesthesia, TEAS and EA are two commonly used interventions with comparable efficacy (21,22). In craniotomy, combined acupuncturepharmacological anesthesia not only reduces intraoperative anesthetic use and accelerates the recovery of spontaneous breathing but also lowers postoperative levels of the brain injury marker S100b, suggesting potential neuroprotective effects (23). Applying TEAS at bilateral Neiguan (PC6), Hegu (LI4), and Zusanli (ST36) points 30 minutes before anesthesia induction reduces intraoperative remifentanil consumption and decreases postoperative dizziness and pruritus (24). When combined with TEAS, the sedative effect of propofol is enhanced at low concentrations while maintaining stable sufentanil analgesia, offering a novel approach for precise anesthetic management (25).Continued development of needle-drug composite anesthesia has led to significant clinical advances, including successful application in cardiac valve surgery and lung resection without endotracheal intubation. This approach preserves spontaneous breathing and hemodynamic stability while avoiding intubation-related airway injury and postoperative nausea and vomiting (26)(27)(28). These explorations demonstrate the clinical value and potential of needle-drug composite anesthesia and justify deeper investigation into its mechanisms. Postoperative acute pain is a common complication of surgical procedures, characterized by severe pain shortly after surgery that impedes early recovery, functional rehabilitation, and overall patient well-being. Ineffective management of this pain can hinder short-term recovery and lead to long-term adverse effects. Research shows that myocardial injury following non-cardiac surgery is closely linked to uncontrolled acute pain, with affected patients often demonstrating significantly elevated serum cardiac troponin levels, indicating a correlation between myocardial damage and pain-induced persistent stress responses (21). Beyond organ damage, severe pain also compromises immune defenses, delays wound healing, and elevates the risk of surgical site infection (29). Furthermore, acute pain is a primary factor in the development of persistent postoperative pain, and its inadequate management severely diminishes patients' quality of life (30). Consequently, timely and effective postoperative pain management offers significant clinical benefits by reducing the risk of organ complications, enhancing immune function to prevent infection, and preventing the transition to chronic pain.A core principle of ERAS is the optimization of pain management. While opioids remain a mainstay for postoperative analgesia in clinical practice, they are suboptimal due to incomplete efficacy and a potential to induce hyperalgesia, thereby exacerbating pain perception (31,32). Their associated risks of addiction and side effects-including nausea, vomiting, and reduced intestinal motility-can also impede recovery (33)(34)(35). Consequently, developing more rational postoperative analgesic strategies is essential. Acupuncture alleviates visceral pain from mechanical traction, spasm, ischemia, or inflammation by modulating central structures and neural circuits across brain regions such as the medulla, cerebral cortex, thalamus, and hypothalamus (36). For neuropathic pain, it acts through multiple pathways, including reducing inflammatory factor release, influencing synaptic plasticity, and regulating brain function (37). Postoperative acute pain arises from multifactorial interactions involving peripheral nociceptor sensitization from surgical trauma, central sensitization, and local ischemic or inflammatory responses. By directly reducing pain intensity and decreasing opioid requirements, acupuncture can indirectly lower the incidence of adverse reactions (32).Clinical studies confirm the positive role of acupuncture in managing postoperative acute pain.Both traditional filiform needle acupuncture and TEAS reduce pain within the first 24 hours after surgery, with TEAS further lowering opioid consumption (34). Given its non-invasive nature, acupuncture exhibits an excellent safety profile and broad acceptability in pediatric populations.TEAS applied at the Neiguan (PC6) and Hegu (LI4) acupoints safely and effectively alleviates postoperative pain in children, reduces analgesic use, improves sleep quality, and significantly increases family satisfaction (38,39). Effective postoperative pain management should not rely on isolated interventions. Administering repeated acupuncture sessions during the early postoperative period provides superior analgesia compared to single treatments or conventional medication alone (40). Thus, implementing a multi-stage acupuncture protocol spanning the entire perioperative period is crucial for achieving optimal pain relief and preventing chronic pain. The value of acupuncture in the perioperative period extends beyond providing preoperative sedation, augmenting intraoperative anesthesia, and relieving postoperative pain. Research confirms its efficacy in preventing and ameliorating common postoperative complications, including nausea and vomiting, gastrointestinal dysfunction, ileus, and postoperative fatigue syndrome, which promotes comprehensive patient recovery (41)(42)(43)(44)(45). This aligns closely with the core principle of ERAS, a multimodal, multidisciplinary approach designed to optimize perioperative management.Although Standardized medical protocols are essential for clinical implementation. This section details six critical considerations for the acupuncture component within such protocols.First, the suitable patient population must be defined, as individual responses to acupuncture vary;establishing scientific inclusion and exclusion criteria is therefore a prerequisite for protocol execution. Following a patient's decision to undergo surgery, a comprehensive condition assessment by professionals, which fully incorporates the patient's preferences, should determine the appropriateness of acupuncture intervention to enhance both its safety and efficacy.Second, the intervention modality must be selected according to the surgical phase, surgery type, and patient preference, given the diversity of available techniques. Effective perioperative modalities include filiform needle acupuncture, EA, acupressure, auricular acupuncture, and TEAS. Among these, TEAS is notable for its non-invasiveness, ease of implementation, standardization, feasibility of blinding, and minimal interference with surgical procedures.Third, point selection requires identifying and validating optimal acupoint combinations based on high-level evidence to enhance efficacy. Existing studies have summarized selections for perioperative acupuncture anesthesia (46), such as Yintang (GV24) for preoperative anxiety, Neiguan (PC6) for postoperative nausea and vomiting, and Shenmen (HT7) for postoperative pain and opioid reduction. Future work can employ data mining to construct standardized acupoint combinations tailored to specific perioperative phases.Fourth, The timing, frequency, duration, and electrical stimulation parameters (waveform, frequency, intensity) of acupuncture interventions are all critical determinants of therapeutic efficacy, yet clinical application parameters for perioperative acupuncture remain inconsistent. For example, protocols for postoperative pain relief vary widely, including interventions beginning 30 minutes before surgery and continuing until its conclusion, those applied only after surgery, or a combination of both, with no established consensus on the optimal timing. Future research must therefore prioritize defining optimal parameter sets for different surgical types.Fifth, During the perioperative period, patients typically receive multiple medications, making it crucial to investigate the interactions between acupuncture and various anesthetics or analgesics.Identifying optimal drug-acupuncture combinations to reduce medication dosage and side effects is essential for developing effective clinical protocols. Sixth, The efficacy of acupuncture is also highly dependent on the practitioner's expertise and technical skill. Consequently, a comprehensive perioperative management team should include not only surgeons, anesthesiologists, and charge nurses but also licensed acupuncturists with relevant clinical experience. These acupuncturists can contribute to preoperative assessments to determine a patient's suitability for acupuncture intervention. They can furthermore develop and implement precise acupuncture treatment plans tailored to specific symptoms and individual needs, which helps ensure reliable and consistent therapeutic outcomes. The safety and efficacy of acupuncture render it a suitable non-pharmacological intervention for perioperative care, with significant benefits demonstrated across all surgical phases. Preoperatively, it alleviates anxiety, maintains patient stability for smoother surgery, and helps prevent postoperative complications. When applied intraoperatively alongside medication, acupuncture reduces drug dosage, accelerates recovery, and indirectly lowers adverse reaction rates. Postoperative acupuncture promptly relieves acute pain, prevents its transition to chronic pain, and shortens hospital stays.Applying acupuncture comprehensively throughout the perioperative period can prevent or mitigate multiple common complications, producing synergistic effects where the whole exceeds the sum of its parts. In summary, perioperative acupuncture reduces patient suffering, alleviates family anxiety, and improves the utilization of medical resources.ERAS is a multidisciplinary management model that integrates multiple optimized perioperative measures, ultimately aiming to reduce patient suffering, shorten recovery time, and improve long- This paper outlines the clinical application of acupuncture across perioperative phases, proposes an organizational foundation and key considerations for establishing perioperative acupuncture protocols, and advocates for greater recognition of its clinical value by professional teams. Such recognition offers a potential avenue to alleviate patients' financial burdens while reducing postoperative mortality and adverse reaction rates.
Keywords: Acupuncture Analgesia, Acupuncture Anesthesia, Enhanced recovery after surgery, Non- pharmacological Intervention, perioperative acupuncture, Transcutaneous electrical acupoint stimulation
Received: 07 Jan 2026; Accepted: 02 Feb 2026.
Copyright: © 2026 LI, Dou, Yu, Liu, Chang, Lei, Li, Zhao and Cao. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
* Correspondence: Jiazhen Cao
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