| Literature DB >> 19907637 |
Raymond M Fish1, Leslie A Geddes.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The objective of this article is to explain ways in which electric current is conducted to and through the human body and how this influences the nature of injuries.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19907637 PMCID: PMC2763825
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eplasty ISSN: 1937-5719
Estimated effects of 60 Hz AC currents*
| 1 mA | Barely perceptible |
| 16 mA | Maximum current an average man can grasp and “let go” |
| 20 mA | Paralysis of respiratory muscles |
| 100 mA | Ventricular fibrillation threshold |
| 2 A | Cardiac standstill and internal organ damage |
| 15/20 A | Common fuse breaker opens circuit |
*From NIOSH.1
†Contact with 20 mA of current can be fatal. As a frame of reference, common household circuit breaker may be rated at 15, 20, and 30 A.
Ways protective skin resistance can be greatly reduced
| • | Significant physical skin damage: cuts, abrasions, burns |
| • | Breakdown of skin at 500 V or more |
| • | Rapid application of voltage to an area of the skin |
| • | Immersion in water |
Figure 1Voltage causes current (I) to flow through a given resistance. The somewhat circular current path is referred to as a circuit.
Figure 2Rusty contacts add resistance to current flow. The headlights are analogous to the internal body resistance, and the rusty connections are similar to skin resistance. Total body resistance is equal to the internal body resistance plus the 2 skin resistances.
Figure 3Diagram of a person connected to a voltage source.
Figure 4Step and touch potentials. Actual numbers may vary with soil type and moisture as well as other factors.
Why immersion in water can be fatal with very low voltages
| 1 | Immersion wets the skin very effectively and greatly lowers skin resistance per unit area |
| 2 | Contact area is a large percentage of the entire body surface area |
| 3 | Electric current may also enter the body through mucous membranes, such as the mouth and throat |
| 4 | The human body is very sensitive to electricity. Very small amounts of current can cause loss of ability to swim, respiratory arrest, and cardiac arrest |
Mechanisms of death in electric shock drowning
| Mechanism | Current needed, mA | Voltage needed, V AC |
|---|---|---|
| Electrical stimulation of the heart causing ventricular fibrillation | 100 | 30 |
| Tetanic contraction (effectively paralysis) of the muscles of respiration | 20 | 6 |
| Loss of muscle control of the extremities: 16 mA for an average man | 16 | 4.8 |
| Loss of muscle control of the extremities: as little as 10 mA for the most sensitive female | 10 | 3 |
Figure 5Measurement setup for voltage and current in water.