Electrical Wire Burn, For Which Children Must Be Admitted For
Electrical Wire Burn, For Which Children Must Be Admitted For
Electrical Wire Burn, For Which Children Must Be Admitted For
Electrical Burns
There are 3 types of electrical burns. Minor electrical burns
usually occur as a result of biting on an extension cord. These
injuries produce localized burns to the mouth, which usually
involve the portions of the upper and lower lips that come in
contact with the extension cord. The injury may involve or spare
the corners of the mouth. Because these are nonconductive
injuries (do not extend beyond the site of injury), hospital
admission is not necessary and care is focused on the area of the
injury visible in the mouth. Treatment with topical antibiotic
creams is sufficient until the patient is seen in a burn unit
outpatient department or by a plastic surgeon.
A more serious category of electrical burn is the high-tension
electrical wire burn, for which children must be admitted for
observation, regardless of the extent of the surface area burn.
Deep muscle injury is typical and cannot be readily assessed
initially. These injuries result from high voltage (>1,000 V) and
occur particularly at high-voltage installations, such as electric
power stations or railroads; children climb an electric pole and
touch an electric box out of curiosity or accidentally touch a
high-tension electric wire. Such injuries have a mortality rate of
3-15% for children who arrive at the hospital for treatment.
Survivors have a high rate of morbidity, including major limb
amputations. Points of entry of current through the skin and the
exit site show characteristic features consistent with current
density and heat. The majority of entrance wounds involve the
upper extremity, with small exit wounds in the lower extremity.
The electrical path, from entrance to exit, takes the shortest
distance between the 2 points and may produce injury in any
organ or tissue in the path of the current. Multiple exit wounds
in some patients attest to the possibility of several electrical
pathways in the body, placing virtually any structure in the body
at risk (Table 68-8). Damage to the abdominal viscera, thoracic
structures, and the nervous system in areas remote from obvious
extremity injury occurs and must be sought, particularly in
injuries with multiple current pathways or those in which the
victim falls from a high pole. Sometimes arcing occurs and
results in concurrent flame burn and clothing fire. Cardiac
abnormalities, manifested as ventricular fibrillation or cardiac
arrest, are common; patients with high-tension electrical injury
need cardiac monitoring until they are stable and have been fully
assessed. Higher-risk patients have abnormal
electrocardiographic findings and a history of loss of
consciousness. Renal damage from deep muscle necrosis and
subsequent myoglobinuria is another complication; such patients
need forced alkaline diuresis to minimize renal damage.
Aggressive removal of all dead and devitalized tissue, even with
the risk of functional loss, remains the key to effective
management of the electrically damaged extremity. Early
debridement facilitates early closure of the wound. Damaged
major vessels must be isolated and buried in a viable muscle to
prevent exposure. Survival depends on immediate intensive
care, whereas a functional result depends on long-term care and
delayed reconstructive surgery.