Understanding Cardiac Arrest

A cardiac arrest means that the heart suddenly stops pumping. Normally, your heart beats continuously and pumps blood through your body, so your organs – especially your brain – get the oxygen they need.

Key points :

  • It usually happens suddenly and without warning.

  • The person will collapse, lose consciousness, and stop breathing normally.

  • Without immediate treatment, cardiac arrest is fatal within minutes.

  • The most effective response is early CPR (cardiopulmonary resuscitation) and the use of a defibrillator (AED) to restore the heart’s rhythm.

In a cardiac arrest, that suddenly stops:

  • The blood no longer circulates.

  • A person usually becomes unconscious right away.

  • Without help, the person can no longer breathe and may die within minutes.

What’s important to remember:

  • A cardiac arrest is always life-threatening.

  • Calling 112 immediately and starting CPR (chest compressions and ventilations) can make the difference.

  • If there’s an AED (automated defibrillator) nearby, use it – it can sometimes get the heart beating again.

It is different from a heart attack:

  • heart attack is caused by a blocked blood vessel in the heart. The heart usually keeps beating, but the muscle is damaged.

  • cardiac arrest is an electrical problem where the heart stops beating properly, often triggered by arrhythmias like ventricular fibrillation.

Cardiac Arrest vs Heart Attack

Did you know ?

  • It can happen to anyone.

  • The first responder in a cardiac arrest… is you! 

  • Effective CPR can prevent brain stem death and preserve brain function.

  • Effective CPR keeps the heart in a more responsive state, allowing it to be more effective if a defibrillator is used!

  • Effective CPR keeps tissues alive by maintaining blood flow and delivering oxygen to the body’s cells!

  • Every year, over 300,000 people suffer from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in Europe.

  • Only 8 to 10% of the people survive because of the lack of people knowing CPR. 

  • About 75% of the cardiac arrests occur at home. 

  • Starting effective CPR within 4-6 minutes after collapsing, and when possible with AED, can up the survival rates significantly!

    

Who is at Risk?

The simple answer: anyone.
Cardiac arrest often happens in people with heart problems, but not always. It can strike young, old, healthy, sick, all gender - people. And it doesn’t wait for the “right” time or place – it can happen at home, at work, or in public, often without warning.

What You Can Do:

Learn CPR with the ERC. Check the Course near to you.