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Guide — Emergency Nursing

Cardiac Arrest & Resuscitation Guide

Chain of survival, high-quality CPR standards, shockable vs non-shockable rhythms, ACLS medications, reversible causes (Hs and Ts), and post-ROSC care for nurses.

11 min read · Emergency Nursing

Educational use only. Resuscitation protocols are based on AHA ACLS guidelines and are institution-specific. Complete formal ACLS certification for clinical competency. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Chain of Survival

1. Recognition & ActivationRecognize cardiac arrest; activate emergency response; get AED
2. Early CPRHigh-quality CPR: push hard, push fast, allow full recoil, minimize interruptions
3. Rapid DefibrillationDefibrillate shockable rhythms as quickly as possible — every minute without shock = 10% decrease in survival
4. Advanced Life SupportACLS interventions: IV/IO access, medications, advanced airway, identify reversible causes
5. Post-Arrest CareTargeted temperature management, hemodynamic optimization, coronary angiography (if indicated), neurological monitoring
6. RecoveryRehabilitation, cognitive/physical recovery support, psychological support

High-Quality CPR Standards

ElementStandard
Compression rate100–120 compressions/minute
Compression depthAdults: ≥ 2 inches (5 cm), not exceeding 2.4 inches (6 cm). Children: at least 1/3 AP diameter of chest (~2 inches). Infants: ~1.5 inches.
Full chest recoilAllow complete recoil between compressions — do not lean on chest. Prevents increased intrathoracic pressure that impedes venous return.
Minimize interruptionsPause compressions < 10 seconds for rhythm check/defibrillation/airway. Pre-charge defibrillator while CPR continues.
Compression fractionCCF ≥ 60% (compressions for at least 60% of resuscitation time)
Ventilation (without advanced airway)30:2 compression-to-ventilation ratio; 1 breath over 1 second; visible chest rise only
Ventilation (with advanced airway)1 breath every 6 seconds (10 breaths/min); do NOT pause compressions for ventilation; avoid hyperventilation (causes air trapping, reduces venous return)
Rescuer rotationSwitch compressors every 2 minutes (or sooner if fatigued) — quality drops after 2 min without rotation
Waveform capnographyPETCO₂ during CPR: target ≥ 10 mmHg (higher values correlate with better outcomes). Sudden rise in PETCO₂ = ROSC

Shockable vs Non-Shockable Rhythms

SHOCKABLE — Defibrillate First

Ventricular Fibrillation (VF)

Chaotic, disorganized. No recognizable waveforms. No cardiac output. Defibrillate immediately.

Pulseless Ventricular Tachycardia (pVT)

Wide-complex, organized fast rhythm. No pulse. Defibrillate immediately.

Action: CPR until defibrillator ready → SHOCK → resume CPR immediately (2 min) → recheck rhythm

NON-SHOCKABLE — CPR + Address Causes

Pulseless Electrical Activity (PEA)

Organized electrical activity on monitor but NO pulse. Find and treat reversible cause (Hs and Ts).

Asystole

Flat line — no electrical activity. CPR + epinephrine + treat reversible causes. Confirm in 2 leads.

Action: CPR + epinephrine q3-5min + aggressively search for reversible causes

ACLS Medications

Epinephrine

1 mg IV/IO every 3–5 minutes

IndicationAll rhythms (VF, pVT, PEA, asystole)
MechanismAlpha-1 agonist: increases coronary and cerebral perfusion pressure during CPR
TimingCan give epinephrine immediately for PEA/asystole. For shockable rhythms (VF/pVT): shock first, then epinephrine after 2nd shock.
NCLEX FocusEpinephrine given q3-5min throughout resuscitation. Same dose for all rhythms.

Amiodarone

300 mg IV/IO first dose; 150 mg second dose (if needed)

IndicationRefractory VF or pulseless VT (shockable rhythms) — after ≥ 3 defibrillations
MechanismClass III antiarrhythmic — blocks K⁺ channels; prolongs action potential and refractory period
TimingGive after 3rd shock if VF/pVT persists. Lidocaine is alternative if amiodarone unavailable.
NCLEX FocusAmiodarone for REFRACTORY shockable rhythms (VF/pVT after 3 shocks). NOT used for PEA or asystole.

Lidocaine

1–1.5 mg/kg IV/IO first dose; 0.5–0.75 mg/kg (max 3 doses)

IndicationAlternative to amiodarone for refractory VF/pVT
MechanismClass Ib antiarrhythmic — blocks Na⁺ channels; stabilizes ventricular myocardium
TimingUsed when amiodarone is unavailable or post-ROSC for VT suppression
NCLEX FocusSecond-line to amiodarone for VF/pVT. Also used for post-ROSC VT maintenance.

Sodium Bicarbonate

1 mEq/kg IV/IO

IndicationNOT routine. Use for: known pre-existing hyperkalemia, TCA overdose, prolonged arrest (>10 min) with documented acidosis
MechanismBuffers metabolic acidosis; drives K⁺ into cells (hyperkalemia); alkalinizes sodium channel (TCA OD)
TimingNOT first-line; give for specific indications only
NCLEX FocusSodium bicarb = TCA overdose (wide QRS), hyperkalemic arrest. Do NOT give routinely.

Atropine

1 mg IV/IO (may repeat up to 3 mg total)

IndicationNO LONGER recommended for asystole or PEA. Use only for SYMPTOMATIC BRADYCARDIA (not in arrest).
MechanismAnticholinergic: blocks vagal tone, increases SA node firing and AV conduction
TimingRemove atropine from cardiac arrest algorithm (2020 AHA guidelines); still used for bradycardia management
NCLEX FocusAtropine NOT used in cardiac arrest (asystole/PEA). Used for SYMPTOMATIC BRADYCARDIA pre-arrest.

Calcium Gluconate / Calcium Chloride

1g IV (calcium gluconate) or 500 mg–1g (calcium chloride)

IndicationHyperkalemic arrest, hypocalcemia, calcium channel blocker or beta-blocker toxicity
MechanismStabilizes cardiac membranes against effects of hyperkalemia; provides calcium for contractility
TimingFor hyperkalemic or calcium channel blocker arrest — not routine
NCLEX FocusCalcium gluconate: hyperkalemia cardiac membrane stabilization. First step in hyperkalemic arrest BEFORE insulin/bicarb.

Hs and Ts — Reversible Causes of Cardiac Arrest

CauseIntervention
HHypovolemiaIV fluid bolus
HHypoxiaOxygenation, ventilation, advanced airway
HHydrogen ion (acidosis)Bicarbonate, ventilation to normalize CO₂
HHypo/HyperkalemiaCalcium gluconate (hyperkalemia); potassium replacement (hypokalemia)
HHypothermiaWarming — continue CPR until rewarmed to 30–35°C
TTension pneumothoraxNeedle decompression (2nd ICS, MCL) then chest tube
TTamponade (cardiac)Pericardiocentesis
TToxinsSpecific antidote per toxin (naloxone for opioid; sodium bicarb for TCA)
TThrombosis (pulmonary)Thrombolytics during CPR if PE suspected; mechanical thrombectomy
TThrombosis (coronary)Emergent coronary angiography/PCI post-ROSC

Hs and Ts are especially important in PEA and asystole — these rhythms often have a reversible cause. Search actively and treat simultaneously with CPR.

Post-ROSC (Return of Spontaneous Circulation) Care

ParameterTarget / Action
Blood pressureMAP ≥ 65–70 mmHg (avoid hypotension); systolic BP ≥ 90 mmHg. Use vasopressors (norepinephrine) if needed.
OxygenSpO₂ 94–99% — titrate O₂ to AVOID hyperoxia (FiO₂ 1.0 immediately post-ROSC is harmful — causes oxidative injury to reperfused brain). Also avoid hypoxia.
VentilationETCO₂ 35–45 mmHg (normocapnia). Avoid hyperventilation (causes cerebral vasoconstriction) and hypoventilation.
Temperature (TTM)Targeted Temperature Management: prevent fever (temperature ≥ 37.5°C actively treated); achieve and maintain 32–36°C for 24h in comatose post-cardiac arrest patients — reduces neurological injury from reperfusion.
GlucoseMaintain glucose 140–180 mg/dL. Avoid hypoglycemia and hyperglycemia post-arrest. Monitor frequently.
Coronary catheterizationEmergent coronary angiography for STEMI or suspected coronary cause (even without ST elevation in some patients). ROSC + STEMI = emergent PCI.
Neurological monitoringContinuous EEG for seizure detection (clinical seizures may be absent — use EEG). Avoid sedation that masks seizures. GCS and neuro checks. CT head if indicated.

NCLEX Pearls

Compression rate: 100–120/min. Faster or slower is less effective.

CPR immediately after each defibrillation — do not check pulse right after shocking. Resume for 2 minutes, THEN check rhythm.

Epinephrine q3–5 min for ALL rhythms. Amiodarone for REFRACTORY VF/pVT (after ≥ 3 shocks).

Atropine is NOT used in cardiac arrest (2020 AHA guidelines removed it from arrest algorithms). Used only for symptomatic bradycardia.

PEA and asystole = search Hs and Ts aggressively. These rhythms often have a treatable cause.

Post-ROSC: avoid hyperoxia — titrate O₂ to SpO₂ 94–99%. Avoid hyperventilation — target ETCO₂ 35–45.

Sudden PETCO₂ rise during CPR = ROSC — check for pulse without stopping compressions first.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 20, 2026

This page is written to align with Emergency Nurses Association (ENA) · AHA ACLS / PALS Guidelines · Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →