A 30-year-old male was accidentally injured by electric shock while cutting high-voltage electrical wires near his home. After an unknown amount of time, he was found lying unconscious near a wire pole, and both of his hands were burned. He was taken by an EMT ambulance to the hospital, during which he was in a conscious state. At the emergency room, he received first aid and was diagnosed with fourth-degree burn wounds on both hands, forearms, and the right chest wall covering approximately 15% of the total body surface area. At the burn intensive care unit, he complained of abdominal pain on the tenth hospital day. A chest radiograph revealed the presence of free air. An exploratory laparotomy subsequently revealed gall bladder and transverse colon perforation, which were repaired with a simple closure. The patient recovered and was discharged after 100 days without any other abdominal complications.