Electricity Flashcards
Effect of 1 mA current
Tingling
Effect of 5 mA current
Pain (anything above 5 mA is painful)
Effect of 15 mA current
Severe pain and muscle contraction
A current of 15 mA or more causes generalized muscle contraction and can therefore cause death by asphyxiation
Effect of 30 mA current
‘Let go’ threshold
Effect of 50 mA current
Respiratory muscle contraction, asphyxia
Effect of 70 mA current
Multifocal beats, cardiac failure
Effect of 100 mA current
Local burns, ventricular fibrillation
Effect of 1000 mA current
Extensive burns, charring
Frequency at which VF is most likely to occur
50-60 Hz
Overhead transmission of electricity
16000V at 50 Hz
At the substation, there is a transformer to step down to 3 x 240V (RMS) windings
One end is bonded to the “star point” - this is also where the paired neutral returns to
Electrical safety: Class I
Live and neutral wires supply the load in a metal case. The safety features are:
- Metal case is earthed to ground any leakage from the circuitry to the case
- Return earth pathway is linked to the star point
- A fuse on the live wire trips if the current leakage is too high
NB if the earth lead from the case to earth is broken, the only way for a current leak to discharge is through someone touching the case! (therefore it’s dangerous)
Faulty earth on one device connected to the patient may discharge through the working earth connected to a different device - causing current flow!
Microshock
The skin is the biggest defence against electric shock - once it is breached, even a tiny (100 microAmp) shock can cause VF if connected directly to the heart. A microshock implies the shock is inside the body.
Improving Class I devices
- Non-earthed isolating transformers can be used to isolate the patient connected part of the circuit
- Using current-operated earth leakage circuit breakers that sense differences in the return (neutral) current and break the circuit - sensitivity <30mA within 30ms
Type B devices
For external connection to patient
- May be Class I, II or III
- May not be directly connected to patient heart
- Maximum allowable DC leak is 50 micro Amps (or 10 micro Amps with multiple circuit faults)
- Maximum allowable AC leak is 500 micro Amps (or 100 micro Amps with multiple circuit faults)
Type BF devices
For external connection to patient - isolated patient part
- Patient connected part is isolated from all other circuits - it is ‘floating’ (cf. BF, CF)
- Maximum allowable DC leak is 50 micro Amps (or 10 micro Amps with multiple circuit faults)
- Maximum allowable AC leak is 500 micro Amps (or 100 micro Amps with multiple circuit faults)
- If the patient connected part is connected to the mains, the circuit must have a leakage limit of 5 mA when 110% of mains voltage is applied