Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Part I Introduction
- Part II Clinical manifestations and management
- 4 Soft tissue patterns in acute electric burns
- 5 The spectrum of electrical injuries
- 6 Electrical trauma: pathophysiology and clinical management
- 7 Acute and delayed neurological sequelae of electrical injury
- 8 Paediatric electrical burns
- 9 Surgical technique for salvage of elecrically damaged tissue
- Part III Tissue responses
- Part IV Biophysical mechanisms of cellular injury
- Index
5 - The spectrum of electrical injuries
from Part II - Clinical manifestations and management
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 April 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Part I Introduction
- Part II Clinical manifestations and management
- 4 Soft tissue patterns in acute electric burns
- 5 The spectrum of electrical injuries
- 6 Electrical trauma: pathophysiology and clinical management
- 7 Acute and delayed neurological sequelae of electrical injury
- 8 Paediatric electrical burns
- 9 Surgical technique for salvage of elecrically damaged tissue
- Part III Tissue responses
- Part IV Biophysical mechanisms of cellular injury
- Index
Summary
History
The commercial development of electrical energy began almost 150 years ago and was followed closely by the occurrence of serious injuries and fatalities. The first death may have been in 1879 in Lyon, France.
At present, over 1000 deaths occur each year in the United States, and electrical burns account for about 4% of the admissions to burn units.
The spectrum of clinical problems that occur from injuries secondary to electrical current span the household current injury of the oral commissure in a child to superficial palmar burns from a higher-tension source to that of a lethal high tension injury. Anatomically, high-tension electrical injury is devastating regardless of the area involved, whether skull, abdomen, or extremity.
Classifications of the type of electrical burns usually list three: thermal, arc, and direct electrical injury. A division of high-tension electrical injury into two subgroups, flash and ‘true’ has been found, by the author, to be useful. This division is based on the observation that some patients, although in contact with a high-tension source, actually sustained a flash pattern of burns and have a clinical course substantially distinct from that of the ‘true’ group. A ‘true’ high-tension electrical injury has the classic clinical features of a well-demarcated leathery full thickness site of current entrance and exit, although the distinction between entrance and exit wounds is not always obvious.
Initial assessment and resuscitation
The initial assessment of the electrically injured patient should consider associated injuries sustained in a fall or other circumstances at the time of the accident.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Electrical TraumaThe Pathophysiology, Manifestations and Clinical Management, pp. 105 - 121Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1992