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Electrical shock

Disease Electrical injuryElectrocauterization

Electrical Shock - Electrical Injury
Overview, Causes, & Risk Factors
Symptoms & Signs
Diagnosis & Tests
Prevention & Expectations
Treatment & Monitoring
Attribution ...

 


The danger from an electrical shock depends on the type of current, how high the voltage is, how the current traveled through the body, the person's overall health and how quickly the person is treated.

Alternate Names : Electrical shock
Definition
An electrical injury can occur to the skin or internal organs when a person is directly exposed to an electrical current.

Electrical shock
Considerations
The human body is a good conductor of electricity. Direct contact with electrical current can be fatal.

Electrical shock
First Aid:
1. If safely possible, shut off the electrical current. Unplug the cord, remove the fuse from the fuse box, or turn off the circuit breakers. Simply turning off an appliance may NOT stop the flow of electricity.

Electrical shock injury, lightning strike, or third-degree burn
Very high body temperature (hyperthermia) or heat stroke
Seizures
Metabolic disorder such as ketoacidosis ...

Electrical shock
Elevated liver enzymes
Elevated triglycerides: A risk factor for heart disease ...

A mild electrical shock can cause a mild tingling. A severe electric shock may knock you unconscious, burn you, and cause internal damage. The outside wound may look minor, but the injury can actually be quite severe.

small, electrical shock is delivered to the heart through the chest to stop certain fast arrhythmias such as atrial fibrillation, supraventricular tachycardia or atrial flutter
ablation ...

In accidental electrical shock, rescuers must be certain that the patient is no longer in contact with the electrical source to avoid shocking themselves.

This is when an electrical shock is used to shock the heart out of the arrhythmia and to restore normal rhythm.
A defibrillator is the machine that delivers the shock. These are used in hospitals, ambulances etc.

Electrical shock
Pins and needles/tingling
Numbness
This pain may be constant or occur off and on throughout the day. The condition can interfere with daily activities, as well as sleep. In some cases, even the touch of a bed sheet can cause pain.

Minute, painless electrical shocks will be delivered through the electrodes placed on the body.

Electrical Cardioversion: Delivering an electrical shock to the heart in order to convert it from A-Fib to normal rhythm.

Exposure to extreme heat, radiation, electrical shock or chemical agents can burn the skin causing pain, Chickenpox
Chickenpox is an illness caused by the varicella-zoster virus.

In this procedure, an electrical shock is delivered to the heart through the chest to stop certain very fast arrhythmias such as atrial fibrillation, supraventricular tachycardia, or sinus tachycardia.

Electrical Shock (Electrical Injury)
Electrical Injury
Epilepsy (Seizure)
Eye Emergencies
First Aid for Difficulty Breathing
First Aid for Near Drowning
First Aid Kit
Fit (Seizure)
Foreign Body in the Eye
Fractured Jaw (Broken OR Dislocated Jaw) ...

Whilst under anaesthetic, you are given an electrical shock over the heart. This may revert the rhythm back to normal.

When it detects abnormal heartbeats, it sends an electrical shock to the heart to restore the heartbeat to normal. Also called implantable cardioverter-defibrillator.
Permalink for ICD ...

If you have had atrial fibrillation for less than 48 hours, your doctor may perform a procedure called cardioversion, using either medicine or a low-voltage electrical shock (electrical cardioversion), ...

Non drug therapies include increasing salt intake or electrical shock treatments to bring the heart rate back to normal if the condition is severe and ongoing. Some heart specialists advise radio frequency ablation for sinus tachycardia.

The insertion of an implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD), which is slightly larger than a pacemaker and delivers an electrical shock to the heart when the heart rate becomes dangerously fast ...

Was electrical shock (defibrillation) necessary to restore normal heart rhythm?
Once hospitalized and resuscitated, did individual receive antiarrhythmic drugs, oxygen, aspirin, and nitroglycerin?

The ICD — The ICD is powered by a battery and generates an electrical shock. It is also called the battery, device, or pulse generator.

Ventricular fibrillation - This is treated with defibrillation, giving the heart a measured electrical shock to restore normal rhythm. The electrical shock can be delivered on the skin over the heart in an emergency situation.

The new heart may begin beating on its own, or the doctor may give you an electrical shock to get your heart started. For safety, you will also have a temporary pacemaker attached to the heart to help the heart beat stay regular.

Shock wave treatment uses electrical shocks to hit and break up the stone, creating easier passage. Patients undergoing this outpatient procedure may resume activities within a few days. A larger stone in the kidney may require nephrolithotomy.

This is a brief procedure in which an electrical shock is delivered to your heart through paddles or patches placed on your chest. The shock stops your heart's electrical activity for a split second.

Defibrillation means giving an electrical Shock to the heart to change the rhythm back to normal (since the rhythm is called fibrillation, hence we are "defibrillating").

devices that apply sharp electrical shocks to the... saving defibrillation therapy without having to...
Electrical Stimulation: Devices To Help Foot Drop In Stroke Survivors
electrical stimulation device on his leg to see if it would...

If a person is going to help someone who has sustained a high voltage shock, he or she needs to be very careful that they don't become a second victim of a similar electrical shock.

Electrical cardioversion delivers an electrical shock to your chest wall, which synchronizes the heart and allows the normal rhythm to restart. This procedure is done after you receive short-acting anesthesia.

Emergency personnel can often stop arrhythmias with emergency CPR (cardiopulmonary resuscitation), defibrillation (electrical shock), and prompt advanced cardiac life support procedures.

Immediate treatment with a defibrillator--a device that delivers an electrical shock to the heart--can help restore the heart's normal rhythm when victims experience cardiac arrest.

Devices - a pacemaker to coordinate the contractions between the left and right ventricle, or an implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD) to monitor the heart rhythm and deliver electrical shocks to control abnormal, rapid heartbeats ...

Ear emergencies
Electrical injury
Electrical shock
Eye emergencies
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cardioversion - the procedure of applying electrical shock to the chest to change an abnormal heartbeat into a normal one.
carotid artery - the major arteries in the neck that supply blood to the brain.

Electrical shock
Drowning
Dangerously low body temperature ( hypothermia )
Electrolyte imbalance (eg, very low levels of potassium or magnesium in the blood) ...

"If a rhythm disturbance does occur, it can be treated by an electrical shock known as defibrillation. This shock will wipe out all the abnormal rhythms and allow a normal rhythm to restore itself." ...

Defibrillation sends an electrical shock through the chest. The surge of electricity aims to stop the ineffective, irregular heart rhythm. This may allow the heart to resume a more normal electrical pattern.

You also may want to keep an automatic external defibrillator with you at home or at work. This device uses electrical shocks to restore your heartbeat to normal.

The defibrillator corrects the heart rhythm by delivering precisely calibrated and timed electrical shocks, when needed, to restore a normal heartbeat.
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Lhermitte's sign A sensation similar to an electrical shock radiating from the back of the head down the spine as the neck is bent forward.

Myoclonic seizures consist of sporadic jerks, usually on both sides of the body. Patients sometimes describe the jerks as brief electrical shocks. When violent, these seizures may result in dropping or involuntarily throwing objects.

Changes in personality, emotions.
Speech and language problems
Throat swelling, choking, strangulation, crush injuries to the chest
Electrical shock
Loss of sensation, hearing, vision, taste, or smell
Seizures
Paralysis
Coma ...

The ICD can quickly detect life-threatening arrhythmias (abnormal heartbeats). It is designed to convert any abnormal heart rhythm back to normal by sending an electrical shock to your heart. This action is called defibrillation.

Doctors sometimes use a procedure called cardioversion to try to get the heartbeat back to a normal rhythm Opens New Window. This can be done using either medicine or a low-voltage electrical shock (electrical cardioversion Opens New Window).

When the heart rate exceeds a rate programmed into the device, the ICD delivers a small, electrical shock to the heart to slow the heart rate.

One set of electrodes stimulates the nerves supplying that muscle by delivering a mild electrical shock; the other set records the nerve's electrical signals on a machine.

If your heart starts beating dangerously fast, the ICD sends a strong electrical shock to your heart to return it to a normal rhythm.

It can sense if the heart had developed a dangerously fast or irregular rhythm, and deliver an electrical shock to restore a normal heartbeat.
Catheter ablation. "Ablation" literally means removal or elimination.

Other treatments for AF include medications such as beta blockers or calcium channel blockers to slow the heartbeat, and anti-arrhythmic drugs or electrical cardioversion (which delivers an electrical shock to the heart) to normalize the heartbeat.

See also: Shock, Symptom, Heart Disease, Surgery, Arrhythmia

Disease Electrical injuryElectrocauterization

 
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