Abstract
IN two previous communications last year, I showed that the amount of this important basis of rational electrotherapeutics had been enormously overstated. Since then I find it given in the new edition of Rosenthal's “Elektricitä;tslehre,” published in the current year, as about 5000 ohms, and, to my surprise, so competent an observer as my friend Prof. Dolbear, in Lockwood's “Handbook of Electric Telegraphy,” states it vaguely as from 6000 to 10,000 ohms. On the other hand, Count Du Moncel, in his paper on the conductivity of imperfect conductors in the Annales de Chámie et de Physique, vol. x., 1877, approaches more nearly to the real value in stating it from wrist to wrist to vary from 350 to 220 kilometres. This is probably the Swiss unit given in Clark and Sabine's tables as equal to 1042 ohms or thereabouts. Both Rosenthal and Du Moncel furnish internal evidence that their excessive estimates were due to imperfect contact through the skin: for the former speaks of using fifty chromic acid elements of two volts E.M.F. each; whereas the current from this large battery, with proper contact, would be utterly unbearable to the patient, if not dangerous. The highest current I have seen employed was from twenty-two of these cells through less than 2000 ohms resistance. It was done against my advice, and produced a large carbuncular boil at the nape of the neck, where the negative pole was applied. I have since then completely modified my method of making the skin contacts, and no similar accident has occurred.
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STONE, W. Third Note on the Electrical Resistance of the Human Body . Nature 29, 528–529 (1884). https://doi.org/10.1038/029528a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/029528a0