The clinical presentation of electrical injury commonly involves
physical, cognitive, and emotional complaints. Neuropsychological studies,
including case reports, have indicated that electrical injury (EI)
survivors may experience a broad range of impaired neuropsychological
functions, although this has not been clarified through controlled
investigation. In this study, we describe the neuropsychological test
findings in a series of 29 EI patients carefully screened and matched to a
group of 29 demographically similar healthy electricians. Participants
were matched by their estimated premorbid intellectual ability.
Multivariate analysis of variance was used to assess group differences in
the following neuropsychological domains: attention and mental speed,
working memory, verbal memory, visual memory, and motor skills. EI
patients performed significantly worse on composite measures of
attention/mental speed and motor skills, which could not be explained
by demographic differences, injury parameters, litigation status, or mood
disturbance. Results suggest that cognitive changes do occur in patients
suffering from electrical injury. (JINS, 2006, 12,
17–23.)