The Difference Between Cardiac Arrest, Heart Attack, and Heart Failure - 3D Animation

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Learn about The Difference Between Cardiac Arrest, Heart Attack, and Heart Failure. In this 3D anima...
Video Transcript:
Cardiac Arrest, Heart Attack, and Heart Failure  all refer to a serious health crisis of the heart. However, all three have very  different causes and treatments. In the most common cause of sudden death, the two main pumping chambers  of the heart just stop pumping.
Here's the heart pumping blood  around the body working normally. The two top chambers of the heart, the Atria collect blood that is coming in  from the lungs and the rest of the body. The Atria pump blood down into the  two bottom chambers, the ventricles.
The bigger and more powerful ventricles  pump blood to the entire body. As long as the ventricles pump all the  blood the body needs, the body's happy. Sometimes, however, the ventricles just stop  pumping.
It's a condition called asystole. More often, the ventricles start quivering.  They look just like a bag of wriggling worms.
They don't accomplish anything. They don't pump  blood. This is called ventricular fibrillation.
Often ventricular fibrillation begins with  the ventricles suddenly pumping very fast, two to four times faster than normal. This is called ventricular tachycardia.  Blood is still circulating.
But if ventricular tachycardia  turns into ventricular fibrillation, the heart no longer pumps. If the heart stops pumping for more  than several minutes, a person dies. Fortunately, the heart sometimes  can be started up again.
A heart attack is almost always  caused by atherosclerotic plaque, a buildup of cholesterol in the artery walls that  blocks blood flow through the coronary arteries. Take a look at this spot. Right at  that spot, inside that coronary artery, a plaque is threatening to block the  blood supply to a part of the heart.
Here's what causes most heart attacks. We're looking at a coronary artery. Here's a fairly small cholesterol filled plaque.
it's not interfering with blood flow much  at all, so it's not causing any symptoms. Here is the pool of cholesterol inside the plaque and this is a fibrous cap that grows over  the plaque and holds the cholesterol inside. Sometimes inflammation inside the plaque weakens  the fibrous cap.
Suddenly, the cap breaks. When that happens, the cholesterol  inside spills out into the artery. A blood clot forms where the cap has ruptured.
The  clot plugs the artery and stops the blood flow. The part of the heart that normally gets blood  from the arteries suddenly loses its blood supply. Unless blood flow is restored, the heart  muscle can die and no longer pump effectively.
Heart failure occurs when either the left or  right side of the heart doesn't work properly. When the left side of the heart isn't working  like it should, blood gets backed up in the lungs. This makes you short of breath.
Also, not enough oxygen-rich  blood is getting to the body. This causes fatigue. Because the kidneys are getting too little blood, they don't make enough urine,  so fluid builds up in the body.
This can cause swelling of the tissues most  easily recognized in the lower legs and feet. When the right side of the heart isn't working  like it should, blood returning from the body backs up in tissues throughout the body. This  too causes swelling in the lower legs and feet.
The sluggish flow of blood and heart failure also  can lead to blood clots forming in the heart. They can travel to the brain and cause a stroke. Blood clots can also form in the  legs and then travel to the lungs, a potentially serious condition.
Finally, the failing heart can develop dangerous  heart rhythms that can cause sudden death.
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