Electrical Injury
Amina Lalani MD, FRCPC
Electrical injuries cause over 500 deaths per year in the United States.
Electrical burns account for 2% to 3% of burns assessed in the pediatric emergency department.
Most electrical burns in children occur at home due to:
Electrical appliances.
Extension cords.
Electrical wall outlets.
Deaths are more common in school-aged children.
More likely due to high-voltage and lightning strikes.
Minor injuries and emergency department visits are more common in younger children.
Tend to be low-voltage injuries.
DEFINITIONS AND CLASSIFICATION2
Definitions:
Electricity is the flow of electrons through a conductor.
Electric current is the flow of electrons away from an object through a conductor.
Voltage =force causing electrons to flow.
Resistance =impedance to flow through the conductor.
Electrical injury occurs when contact is made with an electric current that can cause internal and external injuries.
Two types of electric current.
Alternating current (AC):
Most common in home outlets, and more efficient than DC.
More dangerous than DC, as it causes tetanic muscle contractions that prolong contact with source.
Direct current (DC):
Used in batteries, defibrillators, and pacemakers.
Electrical injuries can be classified as low voltage, high voltage, or lightning injuries.
Low voltage: < 600 V
High voltage: > 1,000 V.
Lightning injury: > 30 × 106 V.
Contact with electrical current causes injury through muscle contraction, thermal burns, blunt trauma, and depolarization of inducible tissue.
Direct injury is due to the effect of current on tissues or conversion to thermal energy.
Indirect injury is due to severe muscle contractions and secondary injury to other systems (e.g., myocardium and tympanic membranes).
FACTORS AFFECTING SEVERITY OF ELECTRICAL INJURY4
Intensity of Current
Current is proportional to voltage and inversely proportional to tissue resistance.
Ohm’s law: Voltage =Intensity of current × Resistance.
The effects of current vary depending on the amount (Table 16-1).
TABLE 16-1 Effects of Varying Current Intensity | ||||||||||||
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Duration of Contact
Prolonged contact results in more injury due to thermal injury and burn.
Resistance of Tissues
Increased resistance decreases current flow forward, and therefore results in increased heat production.
Least resistance: Nerves, blood vessels, mucous membranes, wet skin.
Highest resistance: Fat, bones, tendons.
Pathway of Current
Affects type and severity of injury.
Most dangerous: Vertical pathway along axis of body, as it involves all vital organs.
Hand-to-hand flow may involve heart, respiratory muscles, spinal cord.
Type of Current
Different injury patterns are seen with low versus high voltage.
Low voltage (< 600 V): Mainly AC, therefore prolonged contact; causes tetanic contractions of respiratory muscles, ventricular fibrillation.
High voltage (> 1,000 V): DC or AC; causes single muscle contraction that throws victim away from source; causes ventricular fibrillation, indirect trauma.
ASSESSMENT AND EVALUATION
At Scene
Risk to rescuer: Should not attempt to access patient until current has been cut off or victim has been removed from the source with insulated equipment.
Triage
Rapidly assess and treat lightning victims who are pulseless (Fig. 16-1).Full access? Get Clinical Tree