Not a good idea
They published their case report,
Thunderstorms and iPods - Not a Good
Idea, in the July 12 issue of
the New England Journal of
Medicine.
"The iPod itself was strapped to
his chest and that was where he had
pretty significant burns," noted
co-author Dr Eric Heffernan, a
radiology fellow at Vancouver
General Hospital. He believes that
the lightning's electrical charge
"tracked up along the earplugs,
which seemed to conduct it into and
through his head - it was the muscle
contraction caused by the electrical
current that caused all the
fractures in his mandible [lower
jaw]."
The man survived his ordeal, and
doctors are repairing the damage to
both his hearing and jawbone.
To Heffernan, the incident, while
rare, brings a clear lesson: "I
certainly wouldn't go jogging in a
thunderstorm, but if I did, I
wouldn't wear anything with
earplugs," he said.
The Vancouver report echoes a
similar, well-publicized incident in
June 2006, when a 15-year-old girl
in London suffered lingering
physical, auditory and mental
disabilities after being struck by
lightning while talking on her cell
phone. Reporting in the British
Medical Journal, her doctors
blamed much of the girl's injuries
on the close proximity of the metal
phone.
May also be helpful
And yet one expert said that, in
other cases, portable devices such
as iPods and cell phones may turn
out to be helpful, not harmful, when
lightning strikes.
"First of all, wearing one is not
going to increase your chances of
getting struck," said Martin Uman,
director of the Lightning Research
Centre at the University of Florida,
in Gainesville. He also pointed out
that half of people who are struck
by lightning will suffer eardrum
damage, "regardless of whatever they
are wearing."
And while metal can, in some
cases, conduct electricity into the
body, it can also do the opposite.
Human skin is a natural
electricity-repellent, Uman
explained, and "the other argument
is that if you have metal on the
outside of your body, it increases
the chances that lightning will flow
on the outside of your body, rather
than the inside, which is obviously
preferable."
Effect is unpredictable
The bottom line, according to Uman,
is that a lightning strike's effect
on any one person is as
unpredictable as the phenomenon
itself.
"I even know a case of a guy who
was [struck while] carrying an
umbrella - which everyone thinks is
very bad," Uman said. "But I think
it also saved his life, because the
lightning went down the umbrella and
then went off his elbow into his
hip, so it burned the bottom half of
his body and didn't do anything to
the top half."
Still, the Florida expert agreed
that it's probably not a great idea
to leave ear buds in your ears
during a storm. "It's a metal wire
in your ear," he reasoned.
Almost three-quarters of people
who survive a lightning strike
suffer severe complications and
disabilities.
Get inside
The experts' advice: Get inside
during thunderstorms and avoid
taking showers, washing dishes or
using telephones or electrical
appliances, since electricity can
travel through plumbing and wiring.
If you find yourself outside in a
storm, do not seek cover under
trees, because humans are better
conductors of electricity than
trees.
According to Uman, another good
precaution during thunderstorms is
to "get into a metal car and roll up
the windows."
Uman, who is also a jogger, said
he has his own method of tricking
Mother Nature during storms.
"I jog, but I jog underneath
power lines," he said. In the event
of lightning, "those power lines are
going to get hit, not me." – (HealthDayNews)
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