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Electric Injuries

Injuries caused by electric currents. The concept excludes electric burns (BURNS, ELECTRIC), but includes accidental electrocution and electric shock.
Also Known As:
Injuries, Electric; Accidental Electrocution; Accidental Electrocutions; Electric Injury; Electrocutions, Accidental; Injury, Electric; Electrocution, Accidental
Networked: 74 relevant articles (2 outcomes, 5 trials/studies)

Relationship Network

Disease Context: Research Results

Related Diseases

1. Shock
2. Atrophy
3. Wounds and Injuries (Trauma)
4. Burns
5. Neointima

Experts

1. Gibson, Linda L: 2 articles (05/2007 - 01/2006)
2. Gormley, Andrew K: 2 articles (05/2007 - 01/2006)
3. Mineo, Chieko: 2 articles (05/2007 - 01/2006)
4. Seetharam, Divya: 2 articles (05/2007 - 01/2006)
5. Shaul, Philip W: 2 articles (05/2007 - 01/2006)
6. Vongpatanasin, Wanpen: 2 articles (05/2007 - 01/2006)
7. Barillo, David J: 2 articles (07/2005 - 02/2004)
8. Cancio, Leopoldo C: 2 articles (07/2005 - 02/2004)
9. McManus, Albert T: 2 articles (07/2005 - 02/2004)
10. Walker, Steven C: 2 articles (07/2005 - 02/2004)

Drugs and Biologics

Drugs and Important Biological Agents (IBA) related to Electric Injuries:
1. Plasminogen Activator Inhibitor 1IBA
2. EnzymesIBA
3. Collagen Type I (Type I Collagen)IBA
4. Messenger RNA (mRNA)IBA
5. Retinaldehyde (Retinal)IBA
6. Eosine Yellowish-(YS) (Eosin)IBA
7. Matrix Metalloproteinases (MMPs)IBA
8. MB Form Creatine KinaseIBA
9. Urokinase-Type Plasminogen Activator (Urokinase)FDA Link
10. PlasminogenIBA

Therapies and Procedures

1. Surgical Amputation (Amputations)
2. Electric Countershock (Cardioversion)
3. Resuscitation
4. Therapeutics
5. Electrodes (Electrode)