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CARDIOPULMONARY RESUSCITATION AND OTHER EMERGENCIES: Edited by Bernd W. Böttiger

Epidemiology and risk factors of sudden cardiac arrest

Zimmerman, Dominic S.a; Tan, Hanno L.a,b

Author Information

aDepartment of Clinical and Experimental Cardiology, Amsterdam University Medical Center AMC, Amsterdam

bNetherlands Heart Institute, Utrecht, the Netherlands

Correspondence to Hanno L. Tan, MD, PhD, Dept of Clinical and Experimental Cardiology, Amsterdam University Medical Center AMC, Meibergdreef 9, 1105 AZ Amsterdam, the Netherlands. Tel: +31 20 5663264; e-mail:[email protected]

Current Opinion in Critical Care27(6):p 613-616, December 2021. |DOI:10.1097/MCC.0000000000000896

Abstract

Purpose of review 

Sudden cardiac arrest (SCA) remains a major health burden around the globe, most often occurring in the community (out-of-hospital cardiac arrest [OHCA]). SCA accounts for 15–20% of all natural deaths in adults in the USA and Western Europe, and up to 50% of all cardiovascular deaths. To reduce this burden, more knowledge is needed about its key facets such as its incidence in various geographies, its risk factors, and the populations that may be at risk.

Recent findings 

SCA results from a complex interaction of inherited and acquired causes, specific to each individual. Resolving this complexity, and designing personalized prevention and treatment, requires an integrated approach in which big datasets that contain all relevant factors are collected, and a multimodal analysis. Such datasets derive from multiple data sources, including all players in the chain-of-care for OHCA. This recognition has led to recently started large-scale collaborative efforts in Europe.

Summary 

Our insights into the causes of SCA are steadily increasing thanks to the creation of big datasets dedicated to SCA research. These insights may be used to earlier recognize of individuals at risk, the design of personalized methods for prevention, and more effective resuscitation strategies for OHCA.

Copyright © 2021 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Current Opinion in Critical Care27(6):613-616, December 2021.
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