Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) in Adults

ByShira A. Schlesinger, MD, MPH, Harbor-UCLA Medical Center
Reviewed/Revised Apr 2023
View Patient Education

Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is an organized, sequential response to cardiac arrest, including

  • Recognition of absent breathing and circulation

  • Basic life support with chest compressions and rescue breathing

  • Advanced cardiac life support (ACLS) with definitive airway and rhythm control

  • Postresuscitative care

(See also Neonatal Resuscitation and Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation in Infants and Children.)

Prompt initiation of chest compressions and early defibrillation (when indicated) are the keys to success.

Speed, efficiency, and proper application of CPR with the fewest possible interruptions determine successful outcome; the rare exception is profound hypothermia caused by cold water immersion, when successful resuscitation may be accomplished even after prolonged arrest (up to 60 minutes).

Overview of CPR

(See also the American Heart Association [AHA] 2020 guidelines for CPR and emergency cardiovascular care and 2022 AHA Interim Guidance to Health Care Providers for Basic and Advanced Cardiac Life Support in Adults, Children, and Neonates With Suspected or Confirmed COVID-19.)

Guidelines for health care professionals from the AHA are followed (see figure Adult comprehensive emergency cardiac care). If a person has collapsed with possible cardiac arrest, a rescuer first establishes unresponsiveness and confirms absence of breathing or the presence of only gasping respirations. Then, the rescuer calls for help. Anyone answering is directed to activate the emergency response system (or appropriate in-hospital resuscitation personnel) and, if possible, obtain a defibrillator. Basic life support should be started immediately.

If no one responds to the call for help, the rescuer first activates the emergency response system and then begins basic life support by giving 30 chest compressions at a rate of 100 to 120/minute and a depth of 5 to 6 cm, allowing the chest wall to return to full height between compressions, and then opening the airway (lifting the chin and tilting back the forehead) and giving 2 rescue breaths. The cycle of compressions and breaths is continued (see table CPR Techniques for Health Care Practitioners) without interruption; preferably each rescuer is relieved every 2 minutes. It is crucial that even untrained bystanders begin and maintain continuous chest compressions until skilled help arrives. Therefore, many emergency response providers now give pre-arrival instructions to callers, including phone instruction in compressions-only CPR.

When a defibrillator (manual or automated) becomes available, a person in ventricular fibrillation (VF) or pulseless ventricular tachycardia (VT) is given an unsynchronized shock (see also Defibrillation

Adult comprehensive emergency cardiac care

* If an adequate number of trained personnel are available, patient assessment, CPR, and activation of the emergency response system should occur simultaneously.

Based on the 2020 American Heart Association Guidelines for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care.

The techniques used in basic 1- and 2-rescuer CPR are listed in Table CPR Techniques for Health Care Practitioners. Mastery is best acquired by hands-on training such as that provided in the US under the auspices of the American Heart Association (1-800-AHA-USA1) or corresponding organizations in other countries.

Table
Table

Airway and Breathing

Opening the airway is the second priority (see Clearing and Opening the Upper Airway) after beginning chest compressions. For witnessed out-of-hospital cardiac arrest with an initial shockable rhythm, it is acceptable to provide passive oxygenation for the first 6 minutes, as part of an emergency medical services bundle of care aimed at minimizing pauses in the initial provision of CPR and defibrillation. For mechanical measures regarding resuscitation in children, see table Guide to Pediatric Resuscitation—Mechanical Measures.

When health care professionals provide CPR, bag-valve-mask ventilation should be started as early as possible, but bag-valve-mask ventilation should not delay initiation of compressions or defibrillation. Lay rescuers may provide compressions-only CPR or, if trained to do so, may give rescue breaths delivered mouth-to-mouth (for adults, adolescents, and children) or combined mouth-to-mouth-and-nose (for infants). If available, an oropharyngeal airway may be inserted to maintain airway patency during bag-mask ventilation. Cricoid pressure is not recommended.

If abdominal distention develops, the airway is rechecked for patency, and the amount of air delivered during rescue breathing is reduced. Nasogastric intubation to relieve gastric distention is delayed until suction equipment is available because regurgitation with aspiration of gastric contents may occur during insertion. If marked gastric distention interferes with ventilation prior to availability of suction and cannot be corrected by the above methods, patients are positioned on their side, the epigastrium is compressed, and the airway is cleared.

When qualified rescuers are present, an advanced airway (endotracheal tube or supraglottic airway) is placed without interruption of chest compressions after initial CPR and defibrillation attempts, as described under Airway Establishment and Control. A breath is given every 6 seconds (10 breaths/minute) without interrupting chest compression in adults; infants and children are given breaths every 2 to 3 seconds (20 to 30 breaths/minute). However, chest compression and defibrillation take precedence over endotracheal intubation. Unless highly experienced rescuers are available, endotracheal intubation may be delayed in favor of ventilation with a bag-valve-mask, laryngeal mask airway, or similar device.

For patients suspected of having COVID-19, the American Heart Association released interim guidance for basic and advanced life support (1, 2), which advises the following:

  • Use of personal protective equipment (PPE) appropriate for aerosol-generating procedures (respiratory protection against airborne and droplet particles, eye protection, gloves) for all people present in the treatment area during CPR or other advanced procedures (eg, intubation, chest decompression)

  • Preference for endotracheal intubation or supraglottic airway placement over bag-valve-mask ventilation if this can be done without interrupting compressions

  • Use of a HEPA (high efficiency particulate air [filter]) viral filter on bag-valve devices or ventilator exhalation circuits

  • Use of a mechanical chest compression device if available

This guidance aims to decrease the risk to the health care workers providing care during cardiac arrest.

Airway and breathing references

  1. 1. Edelson DP, Sasson C, Chan PS, et al; American Heart Association ECC Interim COVID Guidance Authors: Interim Guidance for Basic and Advanced Life Support in Adults, Children, and Neonates With Suspected or Confirmed COVID-19: From the Emergency Cardiovascular Care Committee and Get With The Guidelines-Resuscitation Adult and Pediatric Task Forces of the American Heart Association. Circulation 141(25):e933–e943, 2020. doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.120.047463

  2. 2. Goodloe JM, Topjian A, Hsu A, et al: Interim Guidance for Emergency Medical Services Management of Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest During the COVID-19 Pandemic. Circ Cardiovasc Qual Outcomes 14(7):e007666, 2021. doi:10.1161/CIRCOUTCOMES.120.007666

Circulation

Chest compressions

Chest compression should be started immediately on recognition of cardiac arrest and done with minimal interruption until defibrillation is available. In an unresponsive patient whose collapse was unwitnessed, the trained rescuer should immediately begin external (closed chest) cardiac compressions, followed by rescue breathing. Chest compressions must not be interrupted for > 10 seconds at any time (eg, for intubation, defibrillation, rhythm analysis, central IV catheter placement, or transport). A compression cycle should consist of 50% compression and 50% release; during the release phase, it is important to allow the chest to recoil fully. Rhythm interpretation and defibrillation (if appropriate) are done as soon as a defibrillator is available.

The recommended chest compression depth for adults is about 5 to 6 cm. Ideally, external cardiac compression produces a palpable pulse with each compression, although cardiac output is only 20 to 30% of normal. However, palpation of pulses during chest compression is difficult, even for experienced clinicians and is often unreliable. Quantitative end-tidal carbon dioxide monitoring may provide a better estimate of cardiac output during chest compressions; patients with inadequate perfusion have little venous return to the lungs and hence a low end-tidal carbon dioxide level (as do those with hyperventilation). While there is limited evidence supporting specific numbers in physiologic monitoring, it is generally accepted that an end-tidal carbon dioxide level of 10 to 20 mm Hg is associated with adequate CPR. A sudden significant rise in end-tidal carbon dioxide level, usually to a value > 30 mm Hg or a palpable pulse during pause in compressions, indicates restoration of spontaneous circulation.

Mechanical chest compression devices are available; these devices are as effective as properly executed manual compressions and can minimize effects of performance error and fatigue. They may be particularly helpful in some circumstances, such as during patient transport or in the cardiac catheterization laboratory. These devices have also been recommended for use in patients with suspected or confirmed COVID-19 (1).

Open-chest cardiac compression via thoracotomy may be effective but is used only in patients with penetrating chest injuries, shortly after cardiac surgery (ie, within 48 hours), in cases of cardiac tamponade, and most especially after cardiac arrest in the operating room when the patient’s chest is already open. However, thoracotomy requires training and experience and is best done only within these limited indications.

Complications of chest compression

A frequent complication is regurgitation followed by aspiration of gastric contents, causing life-threatening aspiration pneumonia in resuscitated patients.

Costochondral separation and fractured ribs often cannot be avoided because it is important to compress the chest enough to produce sufficient blood flow. Fractures are quite rare in children because of the flexibility of the chest wall. Bone marrow emboli to the lungs have rarely been reported after external cardiac compression, but there is no clear evidence that they contribute to mortality. Lung injury is rare, but pneumothorax after a penetrating rib fracture may occur. Tension pneumothorax should be considered in a patient who has achieved return of spontaneous circulation after prolonged CPR, and subsequently becomes difficult to ventilate, or who is hypoxic and suddenly rearrests. Serious myocardial injury caused by compression is highly unlikely, with the possible exception of injury to a preexisting ventricular aneurysm. Concern for these injuries should not deter the rescuer from doing CPR.

Laceration of the liver is a rare but potentially serious (sometimes fatal) complication and is usually caused by compressing the abdomen below the sternum. Rupture of the stomach (particularly if the stomach is distended with air) is also a rare complication. Delayed rupture of the spleen is very rare.

Circulation reference

  1. 1. Atkins DL, Sasson C, Hsu A, et al: 2022 Interim Guidance to Health Care Providers for Basic and Advanced Cardiac Life Support in Adults, Children, and Neonates With Suspected or Confirmed COVID-19: From the Emergency Cardiovascular Care Committee and Get With The Guidelines-Resuscitation Adult and Pediatric Task Forces of the American Heart Association in Collaboration With the American Academy of Pediatrics, American Association for Respiratory Care, the Society of Critical Care Anesthesiologists, and American Society of Anesthesiologists. Circ Cardiovasc Qual Outcomes 2022;15(4):e008900. doi:10.1161/CIRCOUTCOMES.122.008900

Defibrillation

The most common rhythm in witnessed adult cardiac arrest is ventricular fibrillation (VF); rapid conversion to a perfusing rhythm is essential. Pulseless ventricular tachycardia (VT) is treated the same as VF.

Prompt defibrillation is the only intervention for cardiac arrest, other than high-quality CPR, that has been shown to improve survival; however, the success of defibrillation is time dependent, with about a 10% decline in success after each minute of VF (or pulseless VT). Automated external defibrillators (AEDs) allow minimally trained rescuers to treat VT or VF. Their use by first responders (police and fire services) and their prominent availability in public locations have increased the likelihood of resuscitation.

Defibrillating paddles or pads are placed with one on the anterior right chest wall below the clavicle at the mid-clavicular line and the other over the left 5th or 6th intercostal space at the apex of the heart in the anterior-axillary line. Alternatively, the 2 pads may be placed with one pad over the anterior left hemithorax and the other pad on the posterior left hemithorax. Conventional defibrillator paddles are rarely present on modern defibrillators. When present, paddles are used with conducting paste; pads have conductive gel incorporated into them. One initial shock is advised as soon as a shockable rhythm is detected, after which chest compressions are immediately resumed. Energy level for biphasic defibrillators is between 150 and 200 joules (2 joules/kg in children) for the initial shock; monophasic defibrillators are set at 360 joules for the initial shock. Postshock rhythm is not checked until after 2 minutes of chest compressions. Subsequent shocks are delivered at the same or higher energy level (maximum 360 joules in adults, or 10 joules/kg in children). Patients remaining in VF or VT receive additional shocks every 2 minutes, along with continued chest compression and ventilation and optional drug therapy.

Monitor and IV

Electrocardiographic (ECG) monitoring is established to identify the underlying cardiac rhythm. An IV line may be started; 2 lines minimize the risk of losing IV access during CPR. Large-bore peripheral lines in the antecubital veins are preferred. In adults and children, if a peripheral line cannot be established quickly, a subclavian or femoral central line (see Procedure) can be placed provided it can be done without stopping chest compression (often difficult). Intraosseous lines (see Intraosseous InfusionProcedure) are an option because CPR does not need to be stopped and they have less potential for lethal complications; however, they may have a lower rate of successful placement because no discrete femoral arterial pulsations are available to guide insertion.

The type and volume of fluids or drugs given depend on the clinical circumstances. Usually, IV 0.9% saline is given slowly (sufficient only to keep an IV line open); vigorous volume replacement (crystalloid and colloid solutions, blood) is required only when arrest results from hypovolemia (see Intravenous Fluid Resuscitation), or as part of the management of cardiogenic shock after return of spontaneous circulation.

Special Circumstances

In accidental electrical shock, rescuers must be certain that the patient is no longer in contact with the electrical source to avoid shocking themselves. Use of nonmetallic grapples or rods and grounding of the rescuer allows for safe removal of the patient before starting CPR.

In drowning, rescue breathing may be started in shallow water, although chest compression is not likely to be effectively done until the patient is placed horizontally on a firm surface.

If cardiac arrest follows traumatic injury, airway-opening maneuvers and a brief period of external ventilation after clearing the airway have the highest priority because airway obstruction is the most likely treatable cause of arrest. If cervical spine injury is suspected, jaw thrust, but not head tilt and chin lift, is advised. Other survivable causes of traumatic cardiac arrest include cardiac tamponade and tension pneumothorax, for which immediate needle decompression is lifesaving. However, most patients with traumatic cardiac arrest have severe hypovolemia due to blood loss (for which chest compression may be ineffective) or nonsurvivable brain injuries.

Drugs for ACLS

Despite widespread and long-standing use, no drug or drug combination has been definitively shown to increase neurologically intact survival to hospital discharge in patients with cardiac arrest. Some drugs do seem to improve the likelihood of return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) and thus may reasonably be given (for dosing, including pediatric, see table Drugs for Resuscitation). Drug therapy for shock and cardiac arrest continues to be researched.

Table
Table

First-line drugs

The main first-line drug used in cardiac arrest is

ventricular tachycardia (VT) or ventricular fibrillation

1

Other drugs

A range of additional drugs may be useful in specific settings.

is a vagolytic drug that increases heart rate and conduction through the atrioventricular node. It is given for symptomatic bradyarrhythmias and high-degree atrioventricular nodal block. It is no longer recommended for asystole or pulseless electrical activity.

is recommended for patients with hyperkalemia, hypermagnesemia, hypocalcemia, or calcium channel blocker toxicity. In other patients, because intracellular calcium is already higher than normal, additional calcium is likely to be detrimental. Because cardiac arrest in patients on renal dialysis is often a result of or accompanied by hyperkalemia, these patients may benefit from a trial of calcium if bedside potassium determination is unavailable. Caution is necessary because calcium exacerbates digitalis toxicity and can cause cardiac arrest.

Magnesium sulfate has not been shown to improve outcome in randomized clinical studies. However, it may be helpful in patients with torsades de pointes or known or suspected magnesium deficiency (ie, patients with alcohol use disorder or protracted diarrhea).

2).

may rarely be used to treat VT, but only when VT is due to digitalis toxicity and is refractory to other drugs. A dose of 50 to 100 mg/minute every 5 minutes is given until rhythm improves or the total dose reaches 20 mg/kg.

>

Drugs for ACLS references

  1. 1. Merchant RM, Topjian AA, Panchal AR, et al: Part 1: Executive Summary: 2020 American Heart Association Guidelines for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care. Circulation 142(16_suppl_2):S337-S357, 2020. doi:10.1161/CIR.0000000000000918

  2. 2. Soar J, Böttiger BW, Carli P, et al: European Resuscitation Council Guidelines 2021: Adult advanced life support [published correction appears in Resuscitation 2021 Oct;167:105-106]. Resuscitation 161:115-151, 2021. doi:10.1016/j.resuscitation.2021.02.010

Arrhythmia Treatment

VF or pulseless VT is treated with one direct-current shock, preferably with biphasic waveform, as soon as possible after those rhythms are identified. Despite some laboratory evidence to the contrary, it is not recommended to delay defibrillation to administer a period of chest compressions. Chest compression should be interrupted as little as possible and for no more than 10 seconds at a time for defibrillation. Recommended energy levels for defibrillation vary:

  • 120 to 200 joules for biphasic defibrillators

  • 360 joules for monophasic defibrillators

Current versions of automatic external defibrillators (AEDs) provide a pediatric cable that effectively reduces the energy delivered to children. (For pediatric energy levels, see Defibrillation; for drug doses, see table Drugs for Resuscitation.)

Pericardiocentesis). Tamponade is rarely an occult cause of cardiac arrest but, if suspected, can be confirmed by ultrasonography or, if ultrasonography is unavailable, pericardiocentesis.

Termination of Resuscitation

CPR should be continued until the cardiopulmonary system is stabilized, the patient is pronounced dead, or a lone rescuer is physically unable to continue. If cardiac arrest is thought to be due to hypothermia, CPR should be continued until the body is rewarmed to 34° C.

The decision to terminate resuscitation is a clinical one, and clinicians take into account duration of arrest, age of the patient, and prognosis of underlying medical conditions. The decision is typically made when spontaneous circulation has not been established after CPR and advanced cardiovascular life support measures have been done. In intubated patients, an end-tidal carbon dioxide (ETCO2) level of < 10 mm Hg after 20 minutes of CPR is a poor prognostic sign. Studies of outcomes from cardiac arrest have found that neurologically favorable survival is < 1% in patients > 81 years old (possibly ≥ 73 years old—1, 2) with unwitnessed cardiac arrest and initial non-shockable rhythm.

Termination of resuscitation references

  1. 1. Goto Y, Funada A, Maeda T, Okada H, Goto Y: Field termination-of-resuscitation rule for refractory out-of-hospital cardiac arrests in Japan. J Cardiol 73(3):240–246, 2019. doi:10.1016/j.jjcc.2018.12.002

  2. 2. Grunau B, Scheuermeyer F, Kawano T, et al: North American validation of the Bokutoh criteria for withholding professional resuscitation in non-traumatic out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. Resuscitation 135:51–56, 2019. doi:10.1016/j.resuscitation.2019.01.008

Postresuscitative Care

Restoration of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) is only an intermediate goal in resuscitation. The ultimate goal is survival to hospital discharge with good neurologic function, which is achieved by only a minority of patients with ROSC. To maximize the likelihood of a good outcome, clinicians must provide good supportive care (eg, manage blood pressure, temperature, and cardiac rhythm) and treat underlying conditions, particularly acute coronary syndromes.

Postresuscitative care includes mitigation of reperfusion injury occurring after the period of ischemia. Postresuscitative care should begin immediately after spontaneous circulation is determined. Oxygen administration should be titrated down to an SpO2 of 94% to minimize hyperoxic damage to lungs. Ventilation rate and volume should be titrated to an end-tidal carbon dioxide reading of 35 to 40 mm Hg. A fluid bolus should be administered if tolerated, as well as vasopressor infusion.

Postresuscitation laboratory studies include arterial blood gases (ABG), complete blood count (CBC), and blood chemistries, including electrolytes, glucose, BUN (blood urea nitrogen), creatinine, and cardiac markers. (Creatine kinase is usually elevated because of skeletal muscle damage caused by CPR; troponins, which are unlikely to be affected by CPR or defibrillation, are preferred.) Arterial PaO2 should be kept near normal values (80 to 100 mm Hg). Hematocrit should be maintained at 30% (if cardiac etiology is suspected), and glucose at 140 to 180 mg/dL (7.7 to 9.9 mmol/L); electrolytes, especially potassium, should be within the normal range.

Coronary angiography

The decision to do cardiac catheterization after resuscitation from cardiac arrest should be individualized based on the electrocardiogram (ECG), the interventional cardiologist's clinical impression, and the patient's prognosis. Current guidelines suggest doing emergency angiography (within 2 to 6 hours) for adult patients in whom a cardiac cause is suspected and who have ST-segment elevation (STEMI) on ECG.

It is unclear whether emergency (within 2 hours) or more delayed (median about 120 hours after arrest) cardiac catheterization in patients without STEMI on ECG results in any clinical benefit (1). Some researchers advocate liberal use of cardiac catheterization after ROSC, doing the procedure on most patients unless the etiology is clearly unlikely to be cardiac (eg, drowning) or there are contraindications (eg, intracranial bleeding).

Neurologic support

Only about 10% of all cardiac arrest survivors have good central nervous system function (cerebral performance category [CPC] score 1 or 2—see table Cerebral Performance Category Scale) at hospital discharge. A CPC score of 1 is indicative of good cerebral performance (patient is conscious, alert, able to work but may have mild neurologic or psychologic deficit). A CPC score of 2 is indicative of moderate cerebral performance (patient is conscious, able to do activities of daily living [ADLs] and work in a simple environment). Hypoxic brain injury is a result of ischemic damage and cerebral edema (see pathophysiology of cardiac arrest). Both damage and recovery may evolve over 48 to 72 hours after resuscitation.

Table
Table

Maintenance of oxygenation and cerebral perfusion pressure (avoiding hyperventilation, hyperoxia, hypoxia, and hypotension) may reduce cerebral complications. Both hypoglycemia and hyperglycemia may damage the post-ischemic brain and should be treated.

In adults, targeted temperature management is recommended for patients who remain unresponsive after spontaneous circulation has returned (2, 3). Current recommendations are to target normothermia (< 37.5º C), although many researchers and clinicians continue to advocate for hypothermia (body temperature of 32 to 36° C). Regardless of the chosen target temperature, active temperature management is begun as soon as spontaneous circulation has returned. Techniques to induce and maintain hypothermia can be either external or invasive. External cooling methods are easy to apply and range from the use of external ice packs to several commercially available external cooling devices that circulate high volumes of chilled water over the skin. For internal cooling, chilled IV fluids (4° C) can be rapidly infused to lower body temperature, but this method may be problematic in patients who cannot tolerate much additional fluid volume. Also available are external heat-exchange devices that circulate chilled saline to an indwelling IV heat-exchange catheter using a closed-loop design in which chilled saline circulates through the catheter and back to the device, rather than into the patient. Another invasive method for cooling uses an extracorporeal device that circulates and cools blood externally then returns it to the central circulation. Regardless of the method chosen, the goal is to cool the patient rapidly and to maintain the core temperature at target (< 37.5º C for normothermia or between 32° C and 36° C for hypothermia) for 24 hours after restoration of spontaneous circulation. Currently, there is no evidence that any specific temperature within this range is superior, but it is imperative to avoid hyperthermia (4, 5).

Numerous pharmacologic treatments, including free radical scavengers, antioxidants, glutamate inhibitors, and calcium channel blockers, are of theoretic benefit. Many have been successful in animal models, but none have proved effective in human trials.

Blood pressure support

Current recommendations are to maintain a mean arterial pressure (MAP) of > 65 mm Hg and systolic blood pressure > 90 mm Hg. In patients known to be hypertensive, a reasonable target is systolic blood pressure 30 mm Hg below prearrest level. MAP is best measured with an intra-arterial catheter. Use of a flow-directed pulmonary artery catheter for hemodynamic monitoring has been largely discarded.

Blood pressure support includes

  • IV crystalloid infusion (normal saline or lactated Ringer's)

  • Inotropic or vasopressor drugs with a goal of maintaining systolic blood pressure of at least 90 mm Hg and MAP of at least 65 mm Hg

  • Rarely intra-aortic balloon counterpulsation

Patients with low MAP and low central venous pressure should have IV fluid challenge with 0.9% saline infused in 250-mL increments.

Drugs for Resuscitation).

Drugs for Resuscitation). However, vasoactive drugs should be used at the minimal dose necessary to achieve low-normal MAP because they may increase vascular resistance and decrease organ perfusion, especially in the mesenteric bed. They also increase the workload of the heart at a time when its capability is decreased because of postresuscitation myocardial dysfunction.

If MAP remains <

Intra-aortic balloon counterpulsation can assist low-output circulatory states due to left ventricular pump failure that is refractory to drugs. A balloon catheter is introduced via the femoral artery, percutaneously or by arteriotomy, retrograde into the thoracic aorta just distal to the left subclavian artery. The balloon inflates during each diastole, augmenting coronary artery perfusion, and deflates during systole, decreasing afterload. Its primary value is as a temporizing measure when the cause of shock is potentially correctable by surgery or percutaneous intervention (eg, acute MI with major coronary obstruction, acute mitral insufficiency, ventricular septal defect).

Post-return of spontaneous circulation arrhythmia treatment

Although ventricular fibrillation (VF) or ventricular tachycardiaOther drugsFirst-line drugs).

Patients who had arrest caused by VF or VT not associated with acute myocardial infarction are candidates for an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD). ICDs are implanted similarly to pacemakers and have intracardiac leads and sometimes subcutaneous electrodes. They can sense arrhythmias and deliver either cardioversion or cardiac pacing as indicated.

Postresuscitative care references

  1. 1. Spoormans EM, Lemkes JS, Janssens GN, et al: Ischaemic electrocardiogram patterns and its association with survival in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients without ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction: a COACT trials' post-hoc subgroup analysis. Eur Heart J Acute Cardiovasc Care 11(7):535-543, 2022. doi:10.1093/ehjacc/zuac060

  2. 2. Bernard SA, Gray TW, Buist MD, et al: Treatment of comatose survivors of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest with induced hypothermia. N Engl J Med 346:557–563, 2002. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa003289

  3. 3. Nielsen N, Wetterslev J, Cronberg T, et al: Targeted temperature management at 33°C versus 36°C after cardiac arrest. N Engl J Med 369:2197–2206, 2013. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa1310519

  4. 4. Granfeldt A, Holmberg MJ, Nolan JP, Soar J, Andersen LW; International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation (ILCOR) Advanced Life Support Task Force: Targeted temperature management in adult cardiac arrest: Systematic review and meta-analysis. Resuscitation 167:160–172, 2021. doi:10.1016/j.resuscitation.2021.08.040

  5. 5. Wyckoff MH, Greif R, Morley PT, et al: 2022 International Consensus on Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care Science With Treatment Recommendations: Summary From the Basic Life Support; Advanced Life Support; Pediatric Life Support; Neonatal Life Support; Education, Implementation, and Teams; and First Aid Task Forces. Circulation 146(25):e483–e557, 2022. doi:10.1161/CIR.0000000000001095

More Information

The following English-language resource may be useful. Please note that THE MANUAL is not responsible for the content of this resource.

  1. American Heart Association 2020 CPR and ECC Guidelines: These guidelines for cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and emergency cardiovascular care (ECC) are based on the most recent review of resuscitation science, protocols, and education.

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