scholarly journals An Embedded Based Electric Shock Prevention for Human Safety

Author(s):  
Dr. P. Bala Shanmuga Vadivu ◽  
Dr. S. Ponlatha

An electric shock is the effect of passing an electric current through the body. The minimum current a human can feel is thought to be about 1 milliampere (mA). The effect can range from minor tingling to muscle spasms, tissue damage, fibrillation of the heart, loss of consciousness, and even death. These effects depend on a variety of factors, including the strength of the current, duration of the current, the area of the body through which the current passes, and whether the person is grounded or insulated from the ground. Death caused by an electric shock is referred to as electrocution.

Author(s):  
Indrajit Sanjiv Yadav

The electric current has always been a source of danger to man. The use of electricity in the home, office and factory has increased to such a tremendous extent that energized wires now form dangerous network at every turn.  An electric shock occurs when a person comes in to contact with an           electrical energy source. An electrical energy flows through a portion of the body causing a shock. Exposure to electrical energy may result in no injury at all or may result in devastating damage or death. In the present study compilation of electric current and its medicolegal aspects.


Author(s):  
Azadeh Memarian ◽  
Kamran Aghakhani ◽  
Babak Soltani ◽  
Siamak Soltani

Background: Hanging is a form of strangulation, in which the body is suspended through the neck and the weight of the body acts as a constricting force. This study assessed various factors on the outcome of hanging and identification of prognostic factors related to the outcomes.Methods: Ninety-nine hanging victims from 1995 to 2015 in Iran were evaluated; then, variables such as the cause of death, distribution of mortality, duration of hospitalization, substance abuse consumption, respiratory distress, and cerebral edema were studied in these people. Finally, the data were analyzed.Results: Major cases of suicide by hanging were men. In connection with prognosis, about 12% of the deaths occurred in men and about 21% were represented in women. More importantly, in the matter of suspension, the model was largely incomplete to complete. Also, the outcomes of pulmonary stress and cerebral edema were recognized in association with the type of hanging and mortality prognosis.Conclusion: Only two risk factors, including loss of consciousness at the time of entry into the medical center, as well as the complete suspension, would be predictive operations of death and unsuccessful revival.


1987 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 63-67 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. O. Odesanmi

The police dispersed a crowd of University undergraduates with tear gas, and four of these students were later found dead around an advertisement pole carrying a plastic encasement displaying the picture of ‘Gold Leaf’ cigarette. It was alleged that the students were killed by the police. Autopsy of the four students revealed electric burns scattered all over the body. These burns were later found to be situated at points where the body had made contact with the advertisement pole. The pole was later examined by a team of electrical engineers and found to have a severe earth fault which on test resulted in a potentiation of 175 volts between the body of the sign post and the immediate surrounding. It was the source of the electric current that caused the death of the students.


1960 ◽  
Vol 38 (3) ◽  
pp. 326-330
Author(s):  
E. A. Sellers

Radiation is similar to other environmental changes in that the response or injury produced bears a relationship to the degree of stimulus. A time–dose relationship also exists. It differs from other environmental changes in that many more cells of the body remote from the skin surface are affected. The effects depend on absorbed tissue dose and on dose rate. These dosage factors, the varying sensitivity of the tissues, and differing rates of repair account for the phasic pattern of symptoms and tissue damage which follow radiation. Compared with other stressors (especially chemical) the dose–response curve after radiation is steep. The somatic effects of radiation are the sequelae of the specific molecular injury produced by ionization rather than the primary lesions themselves.


2019 ◽  
Vol 64 (3) ◽  
pp. 108-111
Author(s):  
A Tahir ◽  
P Pokorny ◽  
N Malek

We discuss the case and differential diagnoses of an elderly man who presented with bilateral facial palsy. He had injured his forehead in the garden during a fall on his face and the open wound was contaminated by soil. He then presented to the emergency department with facial weakness causing difficulty speaking. The penny dropped when he started developing muscle spasms affecting his lower jaw a day after admission. It also became clear that he could not open his mouth wide (lock jaw). The combination of muscle spasms and lock jaw (trismus) made tetanus the most likely possibility, and this was proven when he had samples taken from his wound and analysed under the microscope, which showed Clostridium tetani bacilli. C. tetani spores are widespread in the environment, including in the soil, and can survive hostile conditions for long periods of time. Transmission occurs when spores are introduced into the body, often through contaminated wounds. Tetanus in the United Kingdom is rare, but can prove fatal if there is a delay in recognition and treatment.


Author(s):  
Valerio Magnaghi ◽  
Marcella Motta

Pain is an adaptive sensation that normally appears as a warning, activated in response to a damage of the organism. Pain serves to protect the organism to further tissue injuries. The International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP) defined pain as “an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage, or described in terms of such damage” (see definition on the IASP homepage at www.iasp-pain.org). Pain can be generally divided into two categories, acute and chronic pain: acute pain is properly a sudden warning pain which signals that something is wrong in the body. If the cause is not removed acute pain may develop in chronic pain, which is persistent and debilitating.


1903 ◽  
Vol 49 (204) ◽  
pp. 176-177
Author(s):  
J. R. Gilmour

The patient was a child of 7 years, of good family history, both direct and collateral. No other members of the family suffered from epilepsy, and there was no evidence of syphilis. Somewhat slow in development, she began to walk and speak in her fourth year. About this time she would fall down with loss of consciousness lasting from five to six minutes. Bromide diminished these attacks, but afterwards marked convulsions developed, without aura or cry, with frothing at the mouth, incontinence of urine, marked prostration, and headache. Further symptoms supervened. On examination the patient was found to be well developed and nourished. Each three or four months she suffers from the convulsive attacks previously described. Percussion of the head causes the following phenomena:—A light blow on the scalp or face without warning to the child causes either an immediate fall or sudden and very marked trembling, and movements in the upper limbs are noticed. These bear no relation to the strength of the blow, and any hurt to the body produces no effect. Methodical percussion over the motor areas does not produce any isolated contraction. There is no difference on the two sides of the cranium. Excitement increases the effects. Anæsthesia of a skin area by chloride of ethyl produces no alteration. Electrical stimulation does not influence the condition. After the fall the child arose crying and agitated, the walk was uncertain and hesitating, the arms being used to balance, and she walked zigzag, as if the power of directing herself were lost—almost like a cerebellar gait.


1864 ◽  
Vol 13 ◽  
pp. 153-157

In order to obtain the spectra of the elementary bodies, we may employ either flame or the electric current. The former is the more easily managed, but its temperature is for the most part too low to volatilize the body to be examined, or, if it be volatilized or already in the state of gas, to exhibit its characteristic lines. In most cases it is only the electric current that is fitted to produce these lines; and the current furnished by a powerful induction coil was what the authors generally employed.


2017 ◽  
Vol 2 (6) ◽  
pp. 59
Author(s):  
Hasan Sahin ◽  
Mehmet Yalınkılıc

Weed struggle has an important place in agricultural production. The widespread use of chemicals in this struggle is due to its easy applicability, its short-term results, and its economic efficiency. However, the negative effects of these chemicals on the environment and human health have been recognized, and the interest in non-chemical struggle methods has also increased. One of the non-chemical methods of struggle is using electric energy. In this work, which is carried out by passing the electric current through the plant, it is aimed that ended the vital activity of weed (cress), as a result of electric current flowing through it. The experimental setup prepared for use in operation consists of a voltage regulator with 1-300 V steps and copper conductors which will contact the plants. In the experiments, weed seeds germinated under suitable conditions were placed on the board to complete the electric circuit and the circuit was completed by passing current through the plants that the copper conductor tips contacted. As a result of the experiments, plants were observed to lose their vitality about 70% when 100 volts of electricity was applied over the body for 300, 420 and 540 seconds. On the other hand, when electric energy was applied as 200 volts and 300 volts for 300, 420, and 540 seconds, respectively, the vital activity of the plants close to 100% was ended.


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