Electrocution


Cardiac monitoring is not needed in household electrical injury in patients with a normal ECG [BestBets].


Electrical Injury dependant upon

  1. Power source (lightning or electrical)
  2. Voltage (potential difference). High voltage >600V. Domestic supply = 240V
  3. Current (amount of energy flowing).
  4. Duration of contact
  5. Type of current (AC or DC)
  6. Contact : Damp or wet hands/contact significantly reduce resistance to current.

Skeletal muscle tetany occurs particularly with AC current. DC current tends to throw contact away, AC (50Hz as in domestic supply) causes tetany

Current usually passes through body causing burns at entry and exit points.


Clinical

Approach

Thorough (and collateral) history

Trauma primary & 20 surveys

If concern:

  • Trauma series x-rays
  • FBC, x-match (significant trauma)
  • U&E & Creat, CK
  • Urinalysis (myoglobin)
  • ABG if severe rhabdomyolysis
  • Troponin if pathway across chest
  • ECG (arrhythmia / ischaemia)

Electrical injuries can cause:

Electrical Burns

High-voltage electrothermal burns:

Arc burns (only high voltage)

Flash burns

Flame burns


Management points