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Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013
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Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Jan 04, 2016

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Page 1: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Electrical & Lightning Injury

Richard Dionne MDEmergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March

2013

Page 2: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Electrical & Lightning Injury

• Goals & Objectives• Comprehensive understanding of Ohm’s law

• Discuss the differences of AC vs DC and it’s potential clinical impact

• Discuss the early and late systems complications seen in both and their management

• Comprehensive ER management of a victim of low vs High voltage electrical injuries

Page 3: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Case

Patient came into contact with electrical source, touching Left hand accidentally. Source Industrial motor?

What is your approach ?What do you need to know?

Page 4: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

« Electrical Injury »

Damage proportionnal to current flow intensity

Ohm’s Law : Current : I = V/R

Intensity (amp) = Voltage / Resistance

Page 5: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Description

• Telephone lines: 65 V• Household circuits: 110 V• Range / Dryer : 220 V• Power lines: 220 V• Subway rails: 600 V• Residential Trunk lines: 7000 V

Page 6: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Current types• Alternating (AC)– Periodic cycles (reversal of flow)– Residential power– Produces muscle tetany & prolongs contact– Higher risk of Ventricular Fibrillation

• Direct (DC)– Continuous flow one direction– Defibrillators / industrial sources– Single forcefull contraction – throws patient– Higher risk of asystole

Page 7: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Resistance Mucous membranes 100 Ohm / cm2

Wet skin 1200 - 1500 “” Sweat 2500 - 3000 “” Skin 10 - 40 000 “” Plantar Skin 100 - 200 000 “” Callouses 1 - 2 000 000 “”

Bone > Tendon > Skin > Muscle > Vessels > Nerve

Page 8: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Intensity 1 - 5 mA … Tingling / paresthesia 4 mA … « Let-go » child 5 - 10 mA … « Let-go » adult 10 - 20 mA … Tetany 30 - 90 mA … Resp. arrest (medulla) 50 - 100 mA … Ventricular Fibrillation 2 - 5 A … Burns 5 - 10 A … Asystole

Page 9: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Case … What is the significance of this?

Page 10: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Video

Page 11: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Factors associated with Severity

Voltage … ( high > 1000 V… low < 1000 V ) Amperage … ( intensity of current ) Type of current … ( AC > DC ) Tissue resistance & Contact surface Contact duration … Current Trajectory …

hand-hand / hand-foot / head - foot / foot - foot

Environnemental … (water / metal / etc.)

Page 12: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Trimodal Distribution

• Toddlers• Household cords & outlets

• Teenagers• Risk-taking behavior

• Adults• Work related injuries

Page 13: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Types of Injury

• Primary Electrical Phenomena– Cardiac arrythmias / muscle tetany

• Tissue Destruction– Superfical & deep burns – Deep tissue injury / necrosis … misleading

• Secondary Injury from Trauma– Being thrown

Page 14: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Target Organ Injury• Neurology

• Respiratory arrest• Delayed neurologic injury ; RSD

• Vascular: • Thrombosis / Compartment syndromes

• Nephrology: • ARF & ATN / myoglobinuria

• Orthopedic• Posterior shoulder dislocation / trauma

• Ophtalmological• Corneal burns / delayed cataracts

Page 15: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Work-up• ECG• Urinalysis for myoglobin

• Cardiac monitoring• Prolonged monitoring not necessary in asymptomatic

patients with normal ECG, no dysrythmias & exposure < 240 V…

• Cardiac Markers• Abnormal ECG or dysrythmias• High-voltage exposure

Page 16: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Treatment

• A-B-C’s• Burns & Trauma• Fluid resuscitation as needed• Rhabdomyolysis– NaHCO3 / Lasix / Mannitol ?

• Pain control +++

Page 17: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Different Types

Flash Burns Arc Burns Contact Burns

Page 18: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Video

Page 19: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Case

25 yrs old was talking over an outdoor phone when lightning hit a metal post about 1 Km away. She felt a jolt on the phone and feels tinnitus, headache and tired ever since. No specific limb pain or burns felt.

Page 20: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Lightning Injury

• Lightning is a stream of negative current downward from cloud to ground

• Brief duration 1-100 msec

• Tends to pass over the skin rather than through (flashover)

Page 21: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

« Lightning Injury » High energy level at a short duration …

Clinical : Asystole >>> V. Fibrillation

Cardiac automaticity restarts, but Respiratory arrest persists … « Medullary concussion »

Important : Rapid Ventilatory Support … Inverse Triage Notion if Disaster !!!

Page 22: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Lightning

• Mechanism of injury:– Direct strike– Side splash injury– Contact strike– Ground strike– Blunt injury / fall– Thermal burning– Usually outdoor activity / handling of electrical equipment

or telephones

Page 23: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Lightning• Cardio-Respiratory Arrest

• Medullary center “concussion” = triage reversed• Asystole (DC)

• Neurologic long term deficit • Paresthesias / Tinnitus / depression / etc.

• ENT• Ruptured tympanic membranes & ossicular disruption

• Ophtalmo• Cataract / retinal hemorrhages & detachment

• Dermatology• Ferning pattern that resolves

Page 24: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Ferning Flash Burn

Page 25: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Comparison Lightning vs High Voltage

Lightning High Voltage Duration instant prolonged

Energy Level- Voltage 3000 – 3 000 000 V > 1000 V

- Amperage 50 000 A 10 - 10 000 A

Character Direct (DC) Alternative (AC)

Pathway Flashover Horizon. / Vert. Burns Superficial Deep

Rythm Asystole V. Fibrillation

Myoglobinuria rare common

Fasciotomy rare common

Blunt injury explosive projection

Page 26: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Complications

1- Cardiovascular 2- Respiratory 3- Neurologic ( acute & long term ) 4- Renal 5- Musculoskeletal (Trauma & Burns) 6- Ophtalmology 7- ENT 8- GI

Page 27: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Complications : Neurologic

Short & Long term … Chronic pain syndrome Severe headache : post-concussive like syndrome Vertigo & Ataxia Seizures Neurocognitive :

short-term memory loss / personnality change / difficulty in multitasking or learning new abilities

Sleep distubances Peripherical nerves (médian & ulnar) Reflex Sympatic Dystrophy

Page 28: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

When to discharge or admit?

Page 29: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Indication for Admission High tension « > 1000 Volts » …

or Low tension & associated :

Current via : thorax / head …Loss of consciousness …ECG anomalies or arythmia … Electrothermic (deep) burns …Neurovascular compromise of extremity …

Page 30: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Criteria for Discharge( Cunningham et al. )

1- Patient asymptomatic & low risk …

2- Tension < 220 Volts …

3- Exam & ECG initially normal

4- Observation 4 - 8h normal in ER ...

Page 31: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Case

A 14 month old bambino decides to snack with an electrical cord. It is an extension cord from an household appliance on 110V.

He presents to the ER with burns to the mouth, no active bleeding, no airway compromise.

Page 32: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Oral Burns

Page 33: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Contact Burn Mucosa & Eschar

Plastic Surgery Consultation … Need for splinting to prevent retraction scarring

Admission & Monitoring ? … eschar can fall & labial artery hemorrhage …

( up to 10 % in 3 - 5 days )

Page 34: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Case

A 22 yr old, 6 months pregnant, accidently felt a jolt when touching a lampshade. She felt the energy from her Right hand to her Right foot. It was regular household current of 110 V.

She is worried about her pregnancy...

Page 35: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Electrical Injury & Pregnancy

High risk for:MiscarriageFetal demiseStillbirthAbruptio placentae (trauma)

Risk of Stillbirth … Low voltage ... Fatovich et al. 73 % ( 15 pts ) ??? Einarson et al. 15 % ( 62 pts )

Page 36: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Electrical Injury & Pregnancy

High risk of fetal demise : current crosses uterus Fetus must less resistant to shock > 220 V First Trimester …

Observation of fetal movements …higher risk of fetal demise if dimished fetal movements

noted closely after incident...

Page 37: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Electrical & Lightning InjuryKey Concepts

• High-voltage injury can cause significant tissue & organ damage along the entry & exit pathway

• Patients with low voltage electrical injury who have only minor cutaneous burns may be discharged safely if ECG, urine & 4 hour monitoring is normal.

• Lightning injury may cause significant injury, mainstay is to observe these patients.

Page 38: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Video

Page 39: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

TASER

Richard Dionne MDEmergency Medicine – University of Ottawa

March 2013

Page 40: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

From

Page 41: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

TASER

• Thomas A. Swift Electric Rifle (TASER)

• Mechanics:– Air rifle shot 10 meters away with 1200 V in 19 pulses per

sec. over 5 sec.– Short duration total charge of 50 000 V, but very low

amperage < 3 mA… (0.03 A)– Comparison…

• Wall outlet 110 V at 15 A• 60 W light bulb 0,5 A• Christmas Tree bulb 1 A

Page 43: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.
Page 44: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Traditional “Blunt” Pulse

High Energy, “Brute Force” Approach90% Energy Loss

Traditional “Blunt” PulseNew Shaped Pulse™

Arc Phase

Stim Phase

New Shaped Pulse™

Full Energy Penetration

Page 45: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

TASER

• Between 2001 – 2008

• 334 Americans died after shock – (Amnesty International) … 50 directly related???

• June 2008, $5 million damages, death Robert Henson, 40, San Jose California

• 15% related to stun gun & 85 % related to amphetamines …

Page 46: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

TASER

Canadian data

• Quebec Provincial Police 2006, used 51 times, no adverse outcomes

• RCMP in 2009, used 1106 times, no adverse outcome reported

Page 47: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

TASER

• Oct 2007, Robert Dziekanski, 40, Vancouver Airport… Shocked 5 times

• Excited Delirium … vs … TASER ???

Page 48: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

60% 60% SMALLERSMALLER

Page 49: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

TASERConducted Energy Weapons

•Concerns have been raised about CEW role in deaths•5/18 patients in Stratton study tasered prior to death•Several studies have examined effect of taser on healthy volunteers

– 25 exercised to exhaustion then tasered for 15 seconds and EKG performed- no changes observed (Ho et al, JEM, 2011)

– 25 exercised to exhaustion then tasered for 5 seconds and performed EKG, vital signs, ABG, lactate- no difference between shocked and non-shocked (Vilke et al, Acad Emerg Med, 2009)

•But not acidotic, hyperthermic, hyperadrenergic people

Page 50: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

TASERConducted Energy Weapons•Most common theory is that taser causes dysrhythmia

•Swerdlow et al, Acad Emerg Med, 2009

– 56 people died within 15 minutes of being tasered– 7% had shockable rhythm, 93% PEA or asystole– Time from collapse to first recorded rhythm less than 5 minutes

in 77% of patients– Only 2% collapsed immediately, 7% within one minute, and 91%

more than 1 minute later– “…electrically-induced VF is not a common mechanism of death

after tasering.”

Page 51: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Cause of Death in Exited Delirium

• Putting it all together– Hypertrophied, fibrotic heart– Hyperadrenergic state– Oxygen demand exceeds supply in setting of

tachycardia, hypertension, CAD, vasoconstriction, myocardial hypertrophy, and physical restraint of chest

– Severe acidosis requiring huge respiratory compensation, with physical restraint of the chest

– Cardiovascular collapse

Page 52: Electrical & Lightning Injury Richard Dionne MD Emergency Medicine –University of Ottawa March 2013.

Questions ?

www.TASER.com