A groundbreaking study from Delhi reveals that playing calming instrumental music to patients under general anesthesia significantly reduces the need for potent drugs like propofol and fentanyl while promoting faster, smoother recoveries.
Study Details and Methodology
Researchers at Maulana Azad Medical College and Lok Nayak Hospital conducted a randomized controlled trial between March 2023 and January 2024, involving 56 adult patients aged 18 to 65 undergoing laparoscopic cholecystectomy, a common keyhole surgery to remove the gallbladder. All participants received a standard five-drug anesthetic regimen, but the music group listened to patient-selected instrumental tracks—often soft flute compositions blending Hindustani ragas Yaman and Kirwani or piano pieces—via noise-cancelling headphones. This setup allowed scientists to isolate music’s effects on the brain’s auditory pathways, which remain partially active even during unconsciousness.
The trial measured key metrics including anesthetic dosages, recovery times, cortisol levels, and blood pressure stability.
Findings on Drug Reduction and Recovery
Patients exposed to music required substantially lower doses of propofol—averaging 6.7 mg per kg per hour compared to 7.86 mg in the control group—and less fentanyl, leading to quicker awakenings and fewer post-operative complications. They also showed reduced cortisol levels, indicating lower stress responses, alongside better blood pressure control during procedures, which minimized physiological turmoil. Lead investigator Dr. Tanvi Goel described this as more than background noise, calling it a novel integration into anesthetic practice that blunts the body’s neuroendocrine stress at its most vulnerable.
These outcomes suggest music soothes the brain implicitly, even if patients don’t consciously recall it.
Expert Insights and Mechanism
Dr. Sonia Wadhawan, Director Professor of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, explained that auditory pathways stay responsive under anesthesia, allowing music to influence the brain’s internal state and quiet internal stress. Co-investigator Dr. Farah Husain, a certified music therapist, emphasized the goal of clear-headed, pain-free awakenings for early discharge, noting music humanizes the operating room by curbing stress responses. The study, published November 25, 2025, in Music and Medicine, builds on global evidence like a 2015 Lancet meta-analysis of 7,000 patients showing music’s role in easing post-operative pain and anxiety.
Broader Implications for Healthcare
This low-cost intervention—needing only headphones and a player—could cut drug expenses, shorten hospital stays, and enhance patient-centered care worldwide, including in resource-limited settings. As Indian researchers advocate its adoption, it aligns with traditions like ragas’ healing powers and invites further trials to refine protocols. The findings underscore music’s untapped potential in modern surgery, potentially transforming operating theaters into more therapeutic spaces.






