Abstract
The report deals with a 27-year-old male who was standing in a tent and was injured by lightning as it struck a tree about 1.5 m away. He immediately lost consciousness and exhibited ventricular fibrillation when the emergency physician arrived. A clinical picture of hypoxaemic brain damage emerged after initially successful resuscitation. Brain death was diagnosed on the fifth day after injury. The discrete external findings (remaining arborescent skin marks) contrasted markedly with the severe thermal damage to the pectoral muscle and cardiac musculature found during the autopsy. The histological cardiac findings indicated severe acute myocardial infarction affecting virtually all parts of the myocardium.
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Received: 3 February 1997 / Received in revised form: 7 May 1997
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Zack, F., Hammer, U., Klett, I. et al. Myocardial injury due to lightning. Int J Leg Med 110, 326–328 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1007/s004140050097
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s004140050097