Asystole
Basics
Basics
Basics
Description
Description
- Absence of ventricular electrical activity
- Nonshockable rhythm
- 35% of all cardiac arrests
- Survival to discharge
- 11% for in-hospital cardiac arrest
- 1% for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest
Etiology
Etiology
- An end-stage rhythm, sometimes degrading from:
- Prolonged bradycardia
- Prolonged ventricular fibrillation (VF)
- Prolonged pulseless electrical activity
- Patient is extremely unlikely to survive when asystole occurs outside the hospital:
- ∼40% will have return of spontaneous circulation and survive to hospital admission, but <15% survive to hospital discharge
- Prognosis is similarly poor for those patients who develop asystole after countershock for ventricular tachycardia/VF; <10% survive to hospital discharge
- Potentially reversible causes include:
- Hypoxia
- Hypovolemia (blood loss)
- Acidosis
- Hyperkalemia
- Hypokalemia
- Drug overdose
- Hypothermia
- Pulmonary embolism
- Myocardial infarction
- Tension pneumothorax
- Cardiac tamponade
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