Electrical Injuries

Injury from electrical burns can be subtle. Think of patients as having occult multi-trauma - Thoreczko

Electrical Injuries
Electrical Injuries

image by: EB Medicine

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Air Care Series: Electrocution

The evaluation and management of patients who have suffered electrocution is challenging, as presentations range from asymptomatic to refractory cardiac arrest. Important historical features include type of current (AC or DC), voltage, and duration of exposure. Electrocuted patients are especially susceptible to cardiac arrhythmias, neurologic injury, rhabdomyolysis, and compartment syndrome. Even in the well-appearing patient, a thorough evaluation and high index of suspicion for injury is paramount, as electrocuted patients often have atypical injury patterns.

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 Air Care Series: Electrocution

In general, asymptomatic patients who have suffered a low-voltage shock can safely be discharged if there are no concerning findings on history, physical examination, and ECG. Patients who suffer a high-voltage shock should be admitted for a period of observation, even if all components of the ED evaluation are reassuring.

Deranged Physiology

Severity of the burn cannot be assessed externally: the damage is frequently to deep structures, and there may be severe coagulative myonecrosis with minimal external skin damage. Normal burns staging does not apply.

Life in the Fastlane

Management of severe electrical injuries.

StatPearls

There are four main types of electrical injuries: flash, flame, lightning, and true. Flash injuries, caused by an arc flash, are typically associated with superficial burns, as no electrical current travels past the skin.

WikEM

Tissue damage occurs via electrical energy (becomes thermal energy once it enters the body) and mechanical injury from trauma Skin, bone, tendon all have very high resistance. Muscle, nerves, vasculature have lower resistance, more often damaged.

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