High voltage electrical injuries: outcomes & 1-year follow-up from a level 1 trauma centre.

Electrical injuries burns high voltage level 1 trauma centre

Journal

International journal of burns and trauma
ISSN: 2160-2026
Titre abrégé: Int J Burns Trauma
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101581623

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
2021
Historique:
received: 12 12 2020
accepted: 25 02 2021
entrez: 7 6 2021
pubmed: 8 6 2021
medline: 8 6 2021
Statut: epublish

Résumé

High voltage (>1000 V) electric injuries (HVEI) are rare, and dreaded due to profound myonecrosis and fatal arrhythmias. Trauma Centres are well equipped for acute and definitive treatment of injuries. Paucity of burn centres in Himalayan belt make trauma centres a prudent choice for management of HVEIs. We share our experience of HVEIs managed at our Level 1 Trauma Centre. Study conducted at All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Rishikesh. Patients enrolled from prospectively maintained Trauma Registry. HVEI defined as an electrical shock from a source running current of or more than 1000 Volts. All patients admitted to department of Trauma Surgery with diagnosis of HVEIs, over 17 months (May 2019-Sept 2020) included. Demographics, clinical course, morbidity and management noted. Data is presented descriptively. Prevalence of HVEIs was 0.5% (n=8) among all trauma admissions; all patients were males with median age 25 years. Mode of injury accidental in 6 (75%). Seven patients (87.5%) had entry points in the upper extremity. All patients suffered thermal burns (median BSA 11%). Three patients (37.5%) had secondary fall, no concomitant injury found. Urine myoglobin & creatine kinase measured in all patients. No dysrhythmias detected in index or follow up ECGs. Four patients required emergent escharotomy, four underwent amputation. There was a median of 3 procedures per patient. Fasciotomy (n=6) and grafting (n=3) were commonest operative procedures. Multisystem involvement was seen in 3 patients. In-hospital mortality nil. HVEIs are rare injuries, predominantly affecting upper extremity of young males. Amputation rates approach 50% despite expeditious surgical management of extremity burn due to progressive myonecrosis. Creatine kinase and urine myoglobin did not correlate with renal failure; ECG monitoring wasn't advantageous in patients with normal index ECG in our study. Modest BSA doesnot rule out visceral damage. Delayed hollow viscus perforation is a possibility in HVEIs involving parietal wall. Vocational loss is common due to high amputation rates of affected extremity, most commonly upper limb. Trauma team is well trained to provide acute, definitive and intensive care, and level I trauma centres with their integrated services are well suited to manage victims of HVEIs in LMICs.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
High voltage (>1000 V) electric injuries (HVEI) are rare, and dreaded due to profound myonecrosis and fatal arrhythmias. Trauma Centres are well equipped for acute and definitive treatment of injuries. Paucity of burn centres in Himalayan belt make trauma centres a prudent choice for management of HVEIs. We share our experience of HVEIs managed at our Level 1 Trauma Centre.
METHODS METHODS
Study conducted at All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Rishikesh. Patients enrolled from prospectively maintained Trauma Registry. HVEI defined as an electrical shock from a source running current of or more than 1000 Volts. All patients admitted to department of Trauma Surgery with diagnosis of HVEIs, over 17 months (May 2019-Sept 2020) included. Demographics, clinical course, morbidity and management noted. Data is presented descriptively.
RESULTS RESULTS
Prevalence of HVEIs was 0.5% (n=8) among all trauma admissions; all patients were males with median age 25 years. Mode of injury accidental in 6 (75%). Seven patients (87.5%) had entry points in the upper extremity. All patients suffered thermal burns (median BSA 11%). Three patients (37.5%) had secondary fall, no concomitant injury found. Urine myoglobin & creatine kinase measured in all patients. No dysrhythmias detected in index or follow up ECGs. Four patients required emergent escharotomy, four underwent amputation. There was a median of 3 procedures per patient. Fasciotomy (n=6) and grafting (n=3) were commonest operative procedures. Multisystem involvement was seen in 3 patients. In-hospital mortality nil.
CONCLUSIONS CONCLUSIONS
HVEIs are rare injuries, predominantly affecting upper extremity of young males. Amputation rates approach 50% despite expeditious surgical management of extremity burn due to progressive myonecrosis. Creatine kinase and urine myoglobin did not correlate with renal failure; ECG monitoring wasn't advantageous in patients with normal index ECG in our study. Modest BSA doesnot rule out visceral damage. Delayed hollow viscus perforation is a possibility in HVEIs involving parietal wall. Vocational loss is common due to high amputation rates of affected extremity, most commonly upper limb. Trauma team is well trained to provide acute, definitive and intensive care, and level I trauma centres with their integrated services are well suited to manage victims of HVEIs in LMICs.

Identifiants

pubmed: 34094704
pmc: PMC8166659

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

115-122

Informations de copyright

IJBT Copyright © 2021.

Déclaration de conflit d'intérêts

None.

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Auteurs

Divakar Goyal (D)

M.Ch. Trainee, Trauma Surgery & Critical Care, Trauma Centre, AIIMS Rishikesh India.

Nilesh Jagne (N)

M.Ch. Trainee, Trauma Surgery & Critical Care, Trauma Centre, AIIMS Rishikesh India.

Ajay Dhiman (A)

M.Ch. Trainee, Trauma Surgery & Critical Care, Trauma Centre, AIIMS Rishikesh India.

Vishal Patil (V)

M.Ch. Trainee, Trauma Surgery & Critical Care, Trauma Centre, AIIMS Rishikesh India.

Amulya Rattan (A)

Assistant Professor Trauma Surgery, Trauma Centre, AIIMS Rishikesh India.

Classifications MeSH