Practice Areas
- Burn Attorney
- Chemical Burn
- Electrical Burn
- Thermal Burn
- Inhalation Injury and Respiratory Failure
- Chemical Inhalation Injury
- CO Poisoning
- Cyanide Poisoning
- Burn Brain Damage
- Burn Victim Kidney Failure
- Burn Pain and Suffering Compensation
- Burn Injury Attorney
- Burn Injury Compensation
- Burn Injury Lawsuit
- Burn Injury Statistics
- Burn Injury Wrongful Death
- Scald Injury
- Burn Pain
- Second-Degree Burn Lawyer
- Third-Degree Burn Lawyer
- Burned in a Fire
- Fire / Explosion Injury Lawyer
- Hazardous Product Recalls
- Apartment Fire
- Furniture Fire
- Home Fire
- Natural Gas Explosion
- Fire and Exlplosion Burn Injuries
- Fire Burns Lawyer Information
- Fire Investigation Lawyer
- News & Topics
- Pennsylvania
- Massachusetts Fire Explosion Lawyer
Other Practice Areas
- E coli Poisoning
- Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome (HUS)
- Campylobacter
- Clostridium Perfringens
- Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome (HUS)
- Hepatitis A Food Poisoning
- Listeria Poisoning
- Listeriosis
- Salmonella Lawyer
- Shigella
- Amputation
- Spinal Cord Injury
- Traumatic Brain Injury
- Wrongful Death
- Car Accident Attorney MN
- Defective Products
- Foodborne Illness
- Medical Malpractice
- Medical Products
- MN Accident Attorney
- Minnesota Dog Bite Attorney
- Minnesota Injury Lawyer
- Semi Truck Accident Lawyer MN
- Child Safety Lawyers
Personal Injury and Wrongful Death
Electrical Burn
Compensation for Burn Victims
The following electrical burn information is provided by Pritzker Olsen, a national law firm. Our personal injury and wrongful death attorneys have been interviewed by CNN, CBS News, Fox News, Associated Press, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Lawyers USA and others. Attorney Fred Pritzker is listed in the current edition of The Best Lawyers in America.
ASK A LAWYER ABOUT CHEMICAL BURN COMPENSATION >>
What is an Electrical Burn?
When electricity passes through a resistant material such as the human body, energy is given off in the form of heat. This is the cause of electrical burns. The extent of the burn depends on the size of the current, the pathway (i.e. head to toe, hand to hand, etc.), and the length of exposure.
Strength of Electrical Current
The strength of a shock it takes to severely injure or kill someone varies greatly on the situation and on previous heart conditions. A shock as low as 50 volts has killed people by causing heart arryhythmias or heart attacks. However, people have survived shocks greater than 100,000 volts (lightning).
The Pathway of the Electrical Current
Much of the severity of the burn depends on the path of the current through the body. If the current passes through the brain, heart, or other vital organs, severe injury or death may occur. The most current passes through these vital areas when it travels parallel to the body (head to toe); much less passes through these areas when it goes perpendicular (hand to hand).
Types of Electrical Burns
There are three main types of electrical injury:
- True electrical burns result from direct contact with an electric source where the current flows from the source, through the body, and to the ground. This type of burn exhibits a characteristic entry and exit point burn, with the exit wound typically being larger than the entry.
- Arc burns result when current jump from its source to the ground, but a body between the potential difference of the two points, and thus electricity passes through. An example of this type of burn is a burn caused by high-tension power lines. Instead of just one entry and exit wound, there may be many points of injury.
- Thermal burns result when the arc or sparks ignite clothing, and thus cause typical thermal burns. This type of burn usually occurs with a true electrical burn.
Effects of an Electrical Burn
Besides directly burning tissue and physically damaging organs, there are other effects of burn injuries. High voltage can cause intense muscle contractions that frequently fracture or dislocate bones. Particularly common effects of electrical injuries are heart dysfunctions, which occur in around 1/3 of patients with electrical injuries. Electrical current through the heart disrupts the normal electric-driven beat of the heart, causing right-bundle branch block, tachycardia (speeding up of the heart beat), or arrhythmias. Electrical injuries are also known to cause cataract formation, neurological damage and kidney failure.
Compensation for Victims of Electrical Burns
To get compensation in an electrical burn lawsuit, the burn victim must prove that the following elements:
- Someone had a duty of care
- That person breached that duty of care
- The breach of that duty caused the burns
If the above elements of the case can be proved, then the only remaining issue is the amount of money the victim should recover. Generally, the amount recoverable includes past and future medical expenses, past and future loss of earnings, past and future pain and suffering (which includes disfigurement and emotional distress) and other damages.
In severe electrical burn cases, pain and suffering is unquestionably horrendous, so the compensation for pain and suffering is often high. Read about the phases of burn pain.
Electrical Burn Attorney
To contact a burn attorney at PritzkerOlsen, P.A. about your burn case, please call 1-888-377-8900 (toll free), e-mail our lawyers or submit our free case consultation form.
If you retain a burn attorney at our law firm, we will immediately investigate the circumstances surrounding your burn accident. Because it is best to gather evidence soon after the accident, it is important to contact us as soon as possible.
Sources:
Carrougher, Gretchern J. (1998). Burn Care and Therapy. St. Louis: Mosby Inc.
Keywords: Electrical burn attorney, lawsuit, lawyer, settlement, electric burns attorney, fire burns, work injury lawyer, death from electrical burn, wrongful death, kidney damage, heart damage, heart attack.
Alabama AL, Arkansas AK, California CA, Colorado CO, Connecticut CT, Delaware DE, District of Columbia DC, Florida FL, Georgia GA, Idaho ID, Illinois IL, Indiana IN, Iowa, Kansas KS, Kentucky KY, Louisiana LA, Maine ME, Maryland MD, Massachusetts MA, Michigan MI, attorney, Minnesota MN, Mississippi MS, Missouri MO, Montana MT, Nebraska NE, Nevada NV, New Hampshire NH, New Jersey NJ, New York NY, North Carolina NC, North Dakota ND, Ohio OH, Oklahoma OK, Pennsylvania PA, Rhode Island RI, South Carolina SC, wrongful death, South Dakota SD, Tennessee TN, Texas TX, Vermont VT, Virginia VA, West Virginia WV, Wisconsin WI, and Wyoming WY.
Free Case Consultation
Firm News
Fred Pritzker Listed in The Best Lawyers in America
Fred Pritzker has been notified that he will again be listed in The Best Lawyers in America for his work in personal injury and wrongful death litigation.
Burn Injury Lawsuit Settled
Our law firm settled a case involving an apartment fire. Two people died, and two others were injured, one seriously. Learn about a burn injury lawsuit, scald burn, and apartment fire.
Traumatic Brain Injury
Attorneys Fred Pritzker and Elliot Olsen spoke at the annual Minnesota Association for Justice Brain Injury Seminar. They represent brain injury survivors in personal injury cases throughout the nation.
Burn Injury Compensation
- Medical expenses
- Pain and suffering, including physical pain, suffering, emotional distress, disfigurment, disability, mental impairment
- Lost earnings, including lost potential earnings
- Cost of care
Burn Attorney
Information on a burn injury lawsuit, including liability of any of the following:
- An employer
- A property owner
- The owner of a vehicle
- The driver of a vehicle
- A manufacturer
- A utility company
- A propane company
- A person who serviced a propane tank, vehicle, piece of equipment, etc.
- A landlord
- An insurance company
Burn Brain Damage
Brain damage associated with fires is usually cerebral hypoxia (also referred to as cerebral anoxia), a condition where there is an absence of oxygen to the brain.
This is attorney advertising. Past results do not guarantee a similar outcome. The result of each case is determined by the specific facts and the applicable law.

