Cardiac Arrest: Emergency Management, CPR, and ACLS Rhythm Guide

Cardiac arrest is a sudden, life-threatening event in which the heart stops pumping blood effectively. Without immediate intervention, it leads to irreversible brain damage and death within minutes. Understanding the correct approach to an unconscious, pulseless patient is critical in emergency care โ€” whether you’re a healthcare professional or trained responder.


๐Ÿซ€ What is Cardiac Arrest?

Cardiac arrest is defined as the abrupt cessation of heart activity, resulting in:

  • Loss of consciousness
  • Absent carotid or major pulses
  • No effective breathing

The most common scenario: A person suddenly collapses, becomes unresponsive, is not breathing, and has no pulse.


๐Ÿ”Ž Causes of Cardiac Arrest

Cardiac arrest can result from various cardiac and non-cardiac conditions:

  1. Ventricular Fibrillation (VFib) โ€“ Disorganized electrical activity prevents the ventricles from pumping.
  2. Asystole โ€“ No electrical or mechanical heart activity (flatline).
  3. Pulseless Electrical Activity (PEA) โ€“ Electrical rhythm present on ECG, but no palpable pulse due to mechanical failure.
  4. Massive PE, cardiac tamponade, trauma, electrocution, MI, or drug toxicity

๐Ÿšจ First Response to Cardiac Arrest

Key Signs:

  • Unconsciousness
  • No breathing
  • No palpable carotid pulse

Immediate Actions:

  1. Call for help and activate emergency response.
  2. Place patient on a firm, flat surface, face up.
  3. Simultaneously check carotid pulse and breathing (no more than 10 seconds).
  4. If no pulse โ†’ begin high-quality CPR immediately.

๐Ÿ” CPR โ€“ Chest Compression Basics

  • Rate: At least 100โ€“120 compressions per minute
  • Depth: At least 2 inches (5 cm)
  • Compression-to-ventilation: 30:2
  • Hand position: Lower half of sternum, elbows locked, shoulders directly over hands
  • Allow full chest recoil between compressions
  • Minimize interruptions

If outside a hospital, provide rescue breaths mouth-to-mouth. In-hospital, use a bag-valve mask or airway adjunct.


โšก Shockable vs. Non-Shockable Rhythms (ACLS)

Once defibrillator and monitor are attached, rhythm determines next steps.

Rhythm TypeExamplesDefibrillation?
ShockableVentricular Fibrillation (VF), Pulseless VTachโœ… Yes
Non-ShockableAsystole, Pulseless Electrical Activity (PEA)โŒ No

๐Ÿ“‹ ACLS Algorithm: Shockable Rhythm (VF / VT)

  1. Start CPR
  2. Attach monitor/defibrillator
  3. If shockable rhythm:
    โžค Deliver shock (120โ€“200J biphasic or AED auto dose)
    โžค Resume CPR for 2 minutes
    โžค Establish IV access
    โžค Give epinephrine 1 mg IV every 3โ€“5 minutes
    โžค Reassess rhythm โ†’ if still shockable
    โžค Deliver second shock
    โžค Resume CPR
    โžค Give amiodarone 300 mg IV, then 150 mg if needed
    โžค Continue CPR + rhythm checks + further shocks

๐Ÿ›‘ ACLS Algorithm: Non-Shockable Rhythm (Asystole / PEA)

  1. Start CPR immediately
  2. Establish IV access
  3. Give epinephrine 1 mg IV every 3โ€“5 minutes
  4. Continue CPR
  5. Monitor ECG continuously
  6. Search for reversible causes (the โ€œHs and Tsโ€)

๐Ÿงช The Hs & Ts โ€“ Reversible Causes

HsTs
HypovolemiaTension pneumothorax
HypoxiaTamponade (cardiac)
Hydrogen ion (acidosis)Toxins
Hypo-/HyperkalemiaThrombosis (MI or PE)
HypoglycemiaTrauma
Hypothermia

๐Ÿซ Post-Resuscitation Care

If the patient regains pulse (ROSC โ€“ Return of Spontaneous Circulation):

  • Begin post-arrest management: oxygenation, blood pressure support, targeted temperature management
  • Investigate and treat the underlying cause
  • Transfer to intensive care immediately

โœ… Summary

  • CAB approach: Circulation, Airway, Breathing โ€” prioritize compressions
  • Shockable rhythms: VFib, pulseless VT โ†’ Defibrillate + epinephrine + amiodarone
  • Non-shockable rhythms: Asystole, PEA โ†’ Epinephrine + CPR (no defibrillation)
  • High-quality CPR and rhythm reassessment every 2 minutes
  • Look for treatable causes to improve outcomes

Early, consistent, and accurate application of ACLS protocols can significantly improve survival in cardiac arrest patients.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *