Electrocution!

TRAUMA TUESDAY

Today’s trauma pearl of the day is about electrical injury! Thanks to Mark Ramzy for the suggestion and for the clinical images from a patient he had yesterday.

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⚡️Electrical Injury⚡️

Electrical injuries can range from mild to severe

- injuries and management will depend on the level of exposure

- lightning

- high voltage > 600V

- low voltage < 600V

- type of current (AC or DC)

To give you an idea of how much voltage you’re dealing with, typical household electricity provides 110V for general and 240V for high power appliances, industrial electrical lines can have more than 100,000V.

Voltage: the relationship between voltage (V), current (I) and resistance (R) as V = I x R

Current is the measure of the amount of energy flowing through the body

- Skeletal muscle tetany occurs at 16-20 mA - this is why someone is unable to let go when being electrocuted

- Ventricular Fibrillation occurs at 50-100mA

Resistance is the impedance to flow, depending on electrolyte and water content


Circuit:

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- Alternating current (AC) - the most common in homes and offices

→ Much more dangerous than DC! The alternating current causes muscle tetany, so the patient can’t let go

→ High voltage AC: overhead power lines

→ Low voltage AC: household electric appliances

- Direct current (DC) - causes a single muscle contraction, throwing the person away from the source

→ The third rail of the subway


ED Approach to electric injury - things to know and do

- Carefully detailed history

→ what type of current? estimated voltage? loss of consciousness?

- Detailed physical exam, especially careful to look for burns

→ Lichtenberg figures is pathognomonic for lightning injury

- Autonomic dysfunction

→ Dilated pupils may persist for 24-48 hours

Keraunoparalysis - transient weakness, sensory changes, pallor, pulselessness affecting lower limbs > upper limbs

- Entry and exit points in electrical injury (not lightning)

- Beware of delayed bleeding from the labial artery in peri-oral burns (kiddos biting on electrical cords)

- TMs may rupture due to blast effect in lightning strikes

- Always get an EKG!

→ Sinus tach, PVCs are common

→ Dysrhythmias may include VT, VF, asystole

→ Long QT or TWI may also be seen

- If the injury was high voltage, patients should be on a cardiac monitor for 24 hours to watch closely for dysrhythmias

- Other workup as expected for trauma patients - head CT, other imaging as needed, labs, etc.


What if my patient got tased??

- Conducted electrical weapons (CEW aka tasers) are used by police, and those patients sometimes end up in the ED

- The current is high voltage, but neither AC nor DC, but more like a series of low amplitude DC shocks

- A 5 second pulse can delivery 50,000V (current 2.1 mA)

- Generally considered safe without cardiac damage or delayed arrhythmias


This patient was an electrician who got electrocuted while working. Note the area of burned skin where the hair is singed completely off!

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You have a patient in resus who is hypotensive. You make the wise decision to put the echo probe on the patient and you see this…

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Uh oh! A pericardial effusion! Next question, is this tamponade?

You decide to look a little closer and notice this…

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TAMPONADE!!

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Check out some echo examples of tamponade

Ultrasound findings of tamponade: (from WikEM)

- Pericardial effusion (even small effusions can potentially cause tamponade)

- Diastolic collapse of the RA in atrial diastole

- Diastolic collapse of RV

- Plethoric IVC

Classic physical exam findings you may notice on your patient include Beck’s Triad:

1. Muffled heart sounds

2. Jugular venous distension

3. Hypotension


And remember.. tamponade physiology depends on the rate of fluid accumulation and the compliance of the pericardium, NOT the volume of the effusion. A slowly developing effusion may become quite large without causing tamponade, whereas a quickly filling effusion may cause tamponade with only a small volume.

**Always consider tamponade in a patient with PEA or penetrating trauma to the chest**

OK you diagnosed it, now what? The ultimate disposition for this patient will likely be to go to the OR with cardiothoracic surgery - so get them involved early. But if this patient is unstable (hypotensive, peri-code or already in arrest) you need to intervene now.


PERICARDIOCENTESIS

Subxiphoid approach (the most commonly used in the ED) - borrowed from LITFL

- Use a long 18-22 G spinal needle attached to syringe

- insertion: between xiphisternum and left costal margin

- direct towards the left shoulder at 40 degree angle to skin

- continual aspiration as needle approaches RV

- once pericardial fluid aspirated, can insert cannula (triple lumen central line or pigtail catheter) into pericardial space (using the same Seldinger technique we are familiar with)

- attach a 3 way tap and remove fluid with improvement in haemodynamics

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Watch this video!

Dr. Cameron Kyle-Sidell has a great video showing the parasternal approach, featured on Dr. Anna Pickens’ site EMin5.com



For even more info:

https://litfl.com/pericardiocentesis/

https://www.wikem.org/wiki/Pericardiocentesis

https://youtu.be/QjqrO71mg0k

https://emin5.com/2016/07/11/pericardiocentesis/

For another ultrasound guided approach, check out ALiEM - https://www.aliem.com/2013/08/ultrasound-guided-pericardiocentesis/




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