Electrical Shock Sequela
George T. Cole, Jack B Knoll
{"title":"Electrical Shock Sequela","authors":"George T. Cole, Jack B Knoll","doi":"10.1109/esw49146.2022.9925032","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Electric Shock Hazard: “A source of possible injury or damage to health associated with current flow through the human body caused by contact with or approach to exposed energized electrical conductors or circuit parts. Note: Potential severity of injury and damage to health resulting from shock is dependent on the magnitude of the electrical current, the power source frequency (e.g., 60hz, 50hz, dc) and the path and time duration of current through the body. The physiological reaction ranges from perception, muscular contraction, inability to let go, ventricular fibrillation, tissue burns and death.”1,2 Historically, an electrical injury was considered a form of thermal burn injury mediated by Joule Heating. However, over the past twenty years, medical research has revealed that this is just one component of a complex multi-system injury. Electrical trauma produces a pattern of injury that depends on three main factors: the intensity and frequency of the current, the anatomical path that the current takes through the body, and the duration of current exposure. Sequela: “A morbid condition following or occurring as a consequence of another condition or event.” Miller-Keane Encyclopedia and Dictionary of Medicine, Nursing and Allied Health, 7th Edition, 2003 by Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier, Inc. “A sequela. Any condition or state that follows a disease, disorder, or injury, especially one that is a consequence of it. A complication. The term most often used is the plural form, sequelae.” Collins Dictionary of Medicine, Robert M. Youngson, 2004–2005. Electrical Shock Versus Electrocution: Electrocution e·lec·tro·cu·tion (e-lek'tro-kyu'shun), Death caused by electricity. See: electrocute. Synonym(s): electrothanasia Farlex Partner Medical Dictionary © Farlex 2012 Electric Shock “The sum of immediate and delayed pathophysiologic responses of living tissue to a current of electricity of sufficient magnitude to induce abnormal sensations (for example, paresthesia, pain) or objective changes (for example, muscle spasm, cardiac arrhythmia, neurologic impairment including coma, tissue damage).” Farlex Partner Medical Dictionary © Farlex 2012 The electric shock hazard has existed since electricity was invented. The short-term effects for low voltage electric shocks were not visible and workers did not report short term duration (momentary inadvertent contact) electric shocks. For high voltages the electric shock hazard had a significant high probability of immediate electrocution. The electrical shock hazard has been neglected, has been accepted as “part of the job” for electrical workers, historical training instructed the use of the human body as a voltage detector for low voltages5 and to date has not been effectively eliminated in the workplace not only for electrical workers, but also non-electrical workers. Historically electrical workers and non-electrical workers have not reported low voltage shocks. The electric shock hazard is an invisible injury, there is currently no medical scan or test that can detect that the electrical injury has occurred, most patients assessed achieve an inconclusive diagnosis. There are long term consequences from an initial electric shock hazard exposure where electrical current flowed into the human body that electrical workers and non-electrical workers have not been made aware of in the workplace and in electrical safety training received. This is electrical shock sequela. John Knoll is suffering from sequelae related to receiving multiple low voltage electrical shocks while working as an apprentice and journeyperson electrician. Electrical workers need to be made aware that they may be suffering from sequela due to electric shock exposure. Industry needs to change the narrative from a focus on arc flash to a focus on the electrical shock hazard.","PeriodicalId":325388,"journal":{"name":"2022 IEEE IAS Electrical Safety Workshop (ESW)","volume":"21 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-03-07","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"2022 IEEE IAS Electrical Safety Workshop (ESW)","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1109/esw49146.2022.9925032","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Electric Shock Hazard: “A source of possible injury or damage to health associated with current flow through the human body caused by contact with or approach to exposed energized electrical conductors or circuit parts. Note: Potential severity of injury and damage to health resulting from shock is dependent on the magnitude of the electrical current, the power source frequency (e.g., 60hz, 50hz, dc) and the path and time duration of current through the body. The physiological reaction ranges from perception, muscular contraction, inability to let go, ventricular fibrillation, tissue burns and death.”1,2 Historically, an electrical injury was considered a form of thermal burn injury mediated by Joule Heating. However, over the past twenty years, medical research has revealed that this is just one component of a complex multi-system injury. Electrical trauma produces a pattern of injury that depends on three main factors: the intensity and frequency of the current, the anatomical path that the current takes through the body, and the duration of current exposure. Sequela: “A morbid condition following or occurring as a consequence of another condition or event.” Miller-Keane Encyclopedia and Dictionary of Medicine, Nursing and Allied Health, 7th Edition, 2003 by Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier, Inc. “A sequela. Any condition or state that follows a disease, disorder, or injury, especially one that is a consequence of it. A complication. The term most often used is the plural form, sequelae.” Collins Dictionary of Medicine, Robert M. Youngson, 2004–2005. Electrical Shock Versus Electrocution: Electrocution e·lec·tro·cu·tion (e-lek'tro-kyu'shun), Death caused by electricity. See: electrocute. Synonym(s): electrothanasia Farlex Partner Medical Dictionary © Farlex 2012 Electric Shock “The sum of immediate and delayed pathophysiologic responses of living tissue to a current of electricity of sufficient magnitude to induce abnormal sensations (for example, paresthesia, pain) or objective changes (for example, muscle spasm, cardiac arrhythmia, neurologic impairment including coma, tissue damage).” Farlex Partner Medical Dictionary © Farlex 2012 The electric shock hazard has existed since electricity was invented. The short-term effects for low voltage electric shocks were not visible and workers did not report short term duration (momentary inadvertent contact) electric shocks. For high voltages the electric shock hazard had a significant high probability of immediate electrocution. The electrical shock hazard has been neglected, has been accepted as “part of the job” for electrical workers, historical training instructed the use of the human body as a voltage detector for low voltages5 and to date has not been effectively eliminated in the workplace not only for electrical workers, but also non-electrical workers. Historically electrical workers and non-electrical workers have not reported low voltage shocks. The electric shock hazard is an invisible injury, there is currently no medical scan or test that can detect that the electrical injury has occurred, most patients assessed achieve an inconclusive diagnosis. There are long term consequences from an initial electric shock hazard exposure where electrical current flowed into the human body that electrical workers and non-electrical workers have not been made aware of in the workplace and in electrical safety training received. This is electrical shock sequela. John Knoll is suffering from sequelae related to receiving multiple low voltage electrical shocks while working as an apprentice and journeyperson electrician. Electrical workers need to be made aware that they may be suffering from sequela due to electric shock exposure. Industry needs to change the narrative from a focus on arc flash to a focus on the electrical shock hazard.
触电后遗症
触电危险:“与接触或接近暴露的带电导体或电路部件引起的与流经人体的电流有关的可能伤害或损害健康的来源。”注:电击造成的潜在伤害和健康损害的严重程度取决于电流的大小、电源频率(例如,60赫兹、50赫兹、直流电)以及电流通过人体的路径和持续时间。生理反应包括知觉、肌肉收缩、无法放手、心室颤动、组织烧伤和死亡。从历史上看,电损伤被认为是一种由焦耳加热介导的热烧伤。然而,在过去的二十年里,医学研究表明,这只是复杂的多系统损伤的一个组成部分。电创伤产生的伤害模式取决于三个主要因素:电流的强度和频率,电流通过身体的解剖路径,以及电流暴露的持续时间。后遗症:“伴随另一种情况或事件而发生的一种病态状况。”Miller-Keane医学、护理和联合健康百科全书和词典,2003年第7版,由Saunders出版,爱思唯尔公司的印记。后遗症:疾病、紊乱或受伤后的状况或状态,尤指由此引起的后果一个并发症。这个词最常用的复数形式是sequelae。柯林斯医学词典,Robert M. Youngson, 2004-2005。触电vs触电:触电e·lec·tro·cu·tion (e-lek'tro-kyu'shun),由电引起的死亡。看到:以电椅处死。Farlex伙伴医学词典©Farlex 2012电击“活体组织对足以引起异常感觉(例如,感觉异常、疼痛)或客观变化(例如,肌肉痉挛、心律失常、包括昏迷在内的神经系统损伤、组织损伤)的电流的即时和延迟病理生理反应的总和。”Farlex Partner Medical Dictionary©Farlex 2012自从电被发明以来,触电的危险就一直存在。低压电击的短期影响不明显,工人没有报告短期持续(短暂的无意接触)电击。对于高电压,触电危险具有立即触电的显著高概率。触电的危险被忽视了,被认为是电业工人“工作的一部分”,历史上的培训教导使用人体作为低压的电压探测器,到目前为止,无论是电业工人,还是非电业工人,都没有有效地消除这种危险。从历史上看,电气工人和非电气工人没有报告过低压电击。触电危害是一种看不见的伤害,目前没有医学扫描或测试可以检测到电损伤的发生,大多数患者的评估得出的诊断不确定。当电流进入人体时,电业工人和非电业工人在工作场所和接受的电气安全培训中没有意识到最初的触电危险会产生长期后果。这是电击后遗症。约翰·诺尔(John Knoll)在当学徒和见习电工时,多次受到低压电击,患上了后遗症。需要让电业工人知道,他们可能因接触电击而遭受后遗症。行业需要改变叙述,从关注电弧闪光到关注触电危险。
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