ELECTRIC SHOCK
- 1 August 1933
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Surgery
- Vol. 27 (2) , 227-249
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archsurg.1933.01170080003001
Abstract
The electric current has always been a source of danger to man. Lightning alone constituted the electric danger of antiquity, responsible for many deaths by a current estimated at millions of volts and about 20,000 amperes. Apparently there were no serious effects from synthetic electricity until 1879, when a stage carpenter was electrocuted at Lyons by an alternating current of 250 volts from a Siemens dynamo and died in twenty minutes. Currents dangerous enough to kill, however, were used as far back as 1849 to light a stage in Paris. The use of electricity in the home, office and factory has increased to such a tremendous extent that energized wires now form a dangerous and intricate network, surrounding one at every turn. FACTORS INFLUENCING THE BIOLOGIC EFFECTS OF THE ELECTRIC CURRENT In discussing the biologic effects of the electric current, I am primarily interested in unconsciousness and burns. Shocks tooKeywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- ELECTRICAL ACCIDENTSThe Medical Journal of Australia, 1927
- Death by Electric Currents and by Lightning 1Nature, 1913