Many sudden cardiac arrests leave a calling card in advance.
More than half of middle-aged men who experienced sudden cardiac arrests had symptoms up to a month beforehand, a new study shows.
Most of the symptoms — including chest pain, shortness of breath, dizziness, faintness or heart palpitations — occurred four weeks to one hour before their hearts suddenly stopped, according to the research presented Tuesday at the American Heart Association's Scientific Sessions in Dallas.
Cardiac arrest occurs when the heart stops due to a failure in its electrical system, the heart association says. Patients can sometimes survive if they receive CPR immediately and a defibrillator is used quickly to shock the heart into a normal rhythm.
The term heart attack is often mistakenly used to describe cardiac arrest. While a heart attack may cause cardiac arrest and sudden death, the terms don't mean the same thing, the heart association says. Heart attacks are caused by a blockage that stops blood flow to the heart.
About 360,000 out-of-hospital cardiac arrests are reported each year in the USA, the heart group says.
Cardiac arrest "is the ultimate heart problem," says the study's senior author, Sumeet Chugh, a cardiologist and associate director for genomic cardiology at the Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute in Los Angeles. "It's electrical chaos. You'll die within 10 minutes of a cardiac arrest unless you are lucky enough to get emergency assistance quickly."
"The national average is that 90% of people who have sudden cardiac arrest are going to die," he says.
James Gandolfini, star of The Sopranos, and TV journalist Tim Russert died in their 50s of sudden cardiac arrests, Chugh says. "These are the deaths we are trying to prevent."
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