What Is Sudden Cardiac Arrest? | What Causes Sudden Cardiac Arrest? | Small Risk | Can Anything Be Done to Prevent Sudden Cardiac Arrest?

A young, college basketball player was rumored to be a potential top pick in the professional basketball draft. Yet, during a game midseason, he experienced arrhythmias (irregular rhythms of the heart's beating). He was removed immediately from the game and was treated. Three months later, during a tournament game, he collapsed and died. The cause of death? Sudden cardiac arrest. Other athletes, professionals and amateurs, have taken to the field only to meet a fatal defeat. Statistics show that this condition is rare, but what is sudden cardiac arrest? And why has it taken the lives of such strong, healthy athletes?

What Causes Sudden Cardiac Arrest?

One of the largest studies of sudden cardiac arrest appeared in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA). In the study, researchers examined 158 sudden deaths that had occurred in trained athletes throughout the United States between 1985 and 1995.

More than half of the athletes competed at the high school level, 22% competed at the collegiate level, and 7% were professional athletes. Basketball and football accounted for the largest percentage of sports. Other sports included track, soccer, baseball, swimming, volleyball, ice hockey, boxing, crew, ice skating, tennis, and wrestling.

Of those 158 athletes, 134 suffered from cardiovascular causes of sudden death. The most common cause was hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (an inherited condition that causes the left ventricle to be abnormally thick). Other causes of sudden cardiac death in this study included coronary artery abnormalities and myocarditis, an inflammation of the heart's muscular wall. Researchers reported that about 90% of the athletes collapsed during or immediately after a training session, indicating that physical exertion appeared to trigger sudden death.

Sudden cardiac arrest may also be caused by other conditions, such as:.

  • Aortic stenosis (narrowing of the aortic valve)
  • Inherited (congenital) heart disease