Cardiac arrest is the sudden cessation of the heart’s normal electrical and mechanical activity, causing an immediate and complete loss of cardiac output. Without blood flowing to the brain and vital organs, consciousness is lost within seconds and death will follow within minutes unless treatment is started immediately.
For a comprehensive description of cardiac arrest, its causes, what happens during and after an arrest, and the Chain of Survival, see [Cardiac Arrest](/glossary/cardiac-arrest/).
In the context of the SCA UK glossary, this entry uses the clinical definition: cessation of normal rhythmic electrical and mechanical cardiac activity causing immediate haemodynamic compromise. The most common underlying rhythms at the time of cardiac arrest are [ventricular fibrillation](/glossary/ventricular-fibrillation/) and pulseless [ventricular tachycardia](/glossary/ventricular-tachycardia/), both of which require [defibrillation](/glossary/defibrillation/) to terminate. Non-shockable rhythms (pulseless electrical activity and asystole) account for the remainder and require [CPR](/glossary/cpr/) and treatment of reversible causes.