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  by Tony R. Kuphaldt
 extracted from "Lessons 
			In Electric Circuits, Volume I – DC"
 October 18, 2006
 
			from
			
			AllAboutCircuits Website 
			  
			Most of us have experienced some form of 
			electric "shock," where electricity causes our body to experience 
			pain or trauma.  
			  
			If we are fortunate, the extent of that 
			experience is limited to tingles or jolts of pain from static 
			electricity buildup discharging through our bodies. When we are 
			working around electric circuits capable of delivering high power to 
			loads, electric shock becomes a much more serious issue, and pain is 
			the least significant result of shock.
 As electric current is conducted through a material, any opposition 
			to that flow of electrons (resistance) results in a dissipation of 
			energy, usually in the form of heat. This is the most basic and 
			easy-to-understand effect of electricity on living tissue: current 
			makes it heat up.
 
			  
			If the amount of heat generated is 
			sufficient, the tissue may be burnt. The effect is physiologically 
			the same as damage caused by an open flame or other high-temperature 
			source of heat, except that electricity has the ability to burn 
			tissue well beneath the skin of a victim, even burning internal 
			organs.
 Another effect of electric current on the body, perhaps the most 
			significant in terms of hazard, regards the nervous system. 
			By "nervous system" I mean the network of special cells in the body 
			called "nerve cells" or "neurons" which process and conduct the 
			multitude of signals responsible for regulation of many body 
			functions.
 
			  
			
			
			The brain, spinal cord, and sensory/motor organs in the 
			body function together to allow it to sense, move, respond, think, 
			and remember.
 Nerve cells communicate to each other by acting as "transducers", 
			creating electrical signals (very small voltages and currents) in 
			response to the input of certain chemical compounds called 
			neurotransmitters, and releasing neurotransmitters when stimulated 
			by electrical signals. If electric current of sufficient magnitude 
			is conducted through a living creature (human or otherwise), its 
			effect will be to override the tiny electrical impulses normally 
			generated by the neurons, overloading the nervous system and 
			preventing both reflex and volitional signals from being able to 
			actuate muscles.
 
			  
			Muscles triggered by an external (shock) 
			current will involuntarily contract, and there's nothing the victim 
			can do about it.
 This problem is especially dangerous if the victim contacts an 
			energized conductor with his or her hands. The forearm muscles 
			responsible for bending fingers tend to be better developed than 
			those muscles responsible for extending fingers, and so if both sets 
			of muscles try to contract because of an electric current conducted 
			through the person's arm, the "bending" muscles will win, clenching 
			the fingers into a fist.
 
			  
			If the conductor delivering current to 
			the victim faces the palm of his or her hand, this clenching action 
			will force the hand to grasp the wire firmly, thus worsening the 
			situation by securing excellent contact with the wire. The victim 
			will be completely unable to let go of the wire.
 Medically, this condition of involuntary muscle contraction is 
			called tetanus. Electricians familiar with this effect of electric 
			shock often refer to an immobilized victim of electric shock as 
			being "froze on the circuit." Shock-induced tetanus can only be 
			interrupted by stopping the current through the victim.
 
 Even when the current is stopped, the victim may not regain 
			voluntary control over their muscles for a while, as the 
			neurotransmitter chemistry has been thrown into disarray. This 
			principle has been applied in "stun gun" devices such as
			
			Tasers, which on the principle of 
			momentarily shocking a victim with a high-voltage pulse delivered 
			between two electrodes. A well-placed shock has the effect of 
			temporarily (a few minutes) immobilizing the victim.
 
 Electric current is able to affect more than just skeletal muscles 
			in a shock victim, however. The diaphragm muscle controlling the 
			lungs, and the heart - which is a muscle in itself - can also be 
			"frozen" in a state of tetanus by electric current. Even currents 
			too low to induce tetanus are often able to scramble nerve cell 
			signals enough that the heart cannot beat properly, sending the 
			heart into a condition known as fibrillation.
 
			  
			A fibrillating heart flutters rather 
			than beats, and is ineffective at pumping blood to vital organs in 
			the body. In any case, death from asphyxiation and/or cardiac arrest 
			will surely result from a strong enough electric current through the 
			body. Ironically, medical personnel use a strong jolt of electric 
			current applied across the chest of a victim to "jump start" a 
			fibrillating heart into a normal beating pattern.
 That last detail leads us into another hazard of electric shock, 
			this one peculiar to public power systems. Though our initial study 
			of electric circuits will focus almost exclusively on DC 
			(Direct Current, or electricity that moves in a continuous direction 
			in a circuit), modern power systems utilize alternating current, or 
			AC.
 
			  
			The technical reasons for this 
			preference of AC over DC in power systems are irrelevant to this 
			discussion, but the special hazards of each kind of electrical power 
			are very important to the topic of safety.
 How AC affects the body depends largely on frequency. 
			Low-frequency (50- to 60-Hz) AC is used in US (60 Hz) and 
			European (50 Hz) households; it can be more dangerous than 
			high-frequency AC and is 3 to 5 times more dangerous than DC of the 
			same voltage and amperage.
 
			  
			Low-frequency AC produces extended 
			muscle contraction (tetany), 
			which may freeze the hand to the current's source, prolonging 
			exposure. DC is most likely to cause a single convulsive 
			contraction, which often forces the victim away from the current's 
			source. 
 AC's alternating nature has a greater tendency to throw the heart's 
			pacemaker neurons into a condition of fibrillation, whereas DC tends 
			to just make the heart stand still.
 
			  
			Once the shock current is halted, a 
			"frozen" heart has a better chance of regaining a normal beat 
			pattern than a fibrillating heart. This is why "defibrillating" 
			equipment used by emergency medics works: the jolt of current 
			supplied by the defibrillator unit is DC, which halts fibrillation 
			and gives the heart a chance to recover.
 In either case, electric currents high enough to cause involuntary 
			muscle action are dangerous and are to be avoided at all costs. In 
			the next section, we'll take a look at how such currents typically 
			enter and exit the body, and examine precautions against such 
			occurrences.
 
 
			REVIEW:
 
				
					
					
					Electric current is capable of 
					producing deep and severe burns in the body due to power 
					dissipation across the body's electrical resistance.
					
					Tetanus is the condition where 
					muscles involuntarily contract due to the passage of 
					external electric current through the body. When involuntary 
					contraction of muscles controlling the fingers causes a 
					victim to be unable to let go of an energized conductor, the 
					victim is said to be "froze on the circuit."
					
					Diaphragm (lung) and heart 
					muscles are similarly affected by electric current. Even 
					currents too small to induce 
					
					tetanus can be strong 
					enough to interfere with the heart's pacemaker neurons, 
					causing the heart to flutter instead of strongly beat.
					
					Direct current (DC) 
					is more likely to cause muscle tetanus than alternating 
					current (AC), making DC more likely to "freeze" a 
					victim in a shock scenario. However, AC is more likely to 
					cause a victim's heart to fibrillate, which is a more 
					dangerous condition for the victim after the shocking 
					current has been halted. |