Clinical takeaway: For most clinicians, the 2025 Adult Advanced Life Support (ALS) update will not change day‑to‑day practice, but it sharpens several key points around early chest compressions, practical defibrillation strategies, vascular access, and post–ROSC care that are worth deliberately incorporating into local protocols and education.
Background and context
At the end of 2025, the American Heart Association (AHA) CPR and ECC Guidelines were updated, revising and expanding the 2020 recommendations across adult, pediatric, and neonatal life support, systems of care, and education. The adult ALS section is detailed in “Part 9: Adult Advanced Life Support: 2025 American Heart Association Guidelines for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care,” available in Circulation.
For bedside use and teaching, it is useful to bookmark the AHA landing page for the 2025 CPR and ECC Guidelines and the corresponding 2025 ALS algorithms. Clinicians who want the condensed summary can review the 2025 Guidelines Executive Summary.
Opioid overdose and initial actions
In suspected opioid‑associated arrest, the guidelines emphasize that clinicians should not delay CPR while naloxone is being obtained or administered. This is consistent with broader systems‑of‑care guidance summarized in the AHA’s overview of key 2025 CPR & ECC changes.
For protocol design, opioid overdose pathways and training materials should explicitly state “start chest compressions first” for unresponsive patients who are not breathing normally, with naloxone given in parallel when available. For a concise overview to share with teams, see the 2025 CPR and ECC guideline highlights (if updated document is available from AHA).
Chest compressions and mechanical CPR
The 2025 ALS guideline reaffirms that manual chest compressions remain the standard of care for out‑of‑hospital adult cardiac arrest. Mechanical compression devices are not recommended for routine use, and are reserved for select situations such as prolonged transport or procedures where manual CPR is impractical, as discussed in the Adult ALS section.
System‑level quality‑improvement efforts should therefore focus on manual CPR performance—rate, depth, minimal pauses—and timely defibrillation, guided by the AHA’s Adult Cardiac Arrest Algorithm. For a narrative discussion of these changes, see the review “Inside the 2025 CPR and ECC guideline updates from the AHA” in CHEST Physician.
Vascular access during ALS
The updated guidelines explicitly prefer intravenous (IV) access, usually peripheral, over intraosseous (IO) access for medication administration during adult ALS. IO access remains appropriate when IV access is delayed or not feasible, as outlined in Part 9: Adult Advanced Life Support.
When revising code protocols or resuscitation carts, IV‑first and IO‑second sequencing should be explicitly embedded in local ALS algorithms. Quick‑reference materials can also be aligned with the executive summary of the 2025 guidelines so that practice remains consistent across services.
Defibrillation and cardioversion specifics
The 2025 update gives clearer, practical guidance on energy selection and special defibrillation strategies:
For atrial fibrillation or flutter requiring electrical cardioversion, the guideline recommends starting synchronized cardioversion at 200 J biphasic, as specified in the Adult ALS guideline text.
For polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (pVT) with hemodynamic instability, clinicians should treat the rhythm as shockable and proceed with immediate unsynchronized defibrillation.
For refractory ventricular fibrillation, the routine use of vector‑change defibrillation and double‑sequential defibrillation is not recommended, given currently limited and mixed evidence, a point also highlighted in the 2025 key changes overview.
Teams that have adopted double‑sequential protocols should review these recommendations and consider revising local policies and teaching materials accordingly, keeping them aligned with the AHA defibrillation and ALS algorithms.
Point‑of‑care ultrasound (POCUS) during arrest
The guidelines acknowledge a role for point‑of‑care ultrasonography (POCUS) in cardiac arrest when performed by experienced operators and only if it does not interrupt chest compressions or delay critical interventions. This nuanced recommendation is discussed in the Adult ALS guideline article.
POCUS can help identify reversible causes such as tamponade, severe hypovolemia, or tension pneumothorax, and may help differentiate true PEA from pseudo‑PEA. To implement this safely, institutions should deliberately integrate POCUS into arrest simulations and team training, using the narrative guidance from the 2025 ALS guidelines and system‑of‑care recommendations in the executive summary.
Post resuscitation temperature management
For comatose adult survivors of cardiac arrest, the 2025 guidelines recommend active temperature control with a target of approximately 36 °C for at least 36 hours, rather than deep hypothermia. This approach is described in both the Adult ALS section and the Executive Summary of the 2025 Guidelines.
ICU protocols should therefore emphasize continuous temperature monitoring, device‑based control around 36 °C, avoidance of fever, and structured neuroprognostication—elements that can be aligned with the AHA’s broader post–cardiac arrest care guidance. Updating order sets with direct links to these documents can help standardize post‑ROSC care.
Education, training, and cognitive aids
The 2025 guidelines also underscore the importance of education, both for professionals and the public.
The AHA highlights that children around 12 years of age can learn effective CPR and AED use, supporting school‑based programs and the “CPR in schools” movement. For background on youth CPR capability, see this review of schoolchildren and life‑supporting first aid.
For clinicians, the guidelines endorse cognitive aids—such as checklists, visual algorithms, and smart‑device apps—during resuscitation, as noted in the 2025 guideline highlights and implementation discussions like the CHEST Physician summary of 2025 CPR and ECC updates.
In contrast, lay rescuers are encouraged to focus on simple, high‑yield actions—early CPR and rapid AED use—rather than complex apps or detailed checklists, consistent with the AHA’s public‑facing CPR & First Aid resources.
Hospitals can use these recommendations to justify widespread use of cognitive aids and resuscitation apps for professionals, while community programs emphasize hands‑only CPR and accessible AED training supported by AHA AED implementation materials.
Bringing it into your practice
Taken together, the 2025 Adult ALS changes are evolutionary rather than revolutionary, but they refine several high‑yield elements of resuscitation practice. Clinicians can quickly operationalize the update by emphasizing “CPR first” in opioid overdose, preferring manual compressions over routine mechanical devices, prioritizing IV over IO access, applying the updated defibrillation and cardioversion recommendations, using POCUS judiciously without interrupting compressions, targeting 36 °C for at least 36 hours post‑ROSC, and systematically integrating cognitive aids into professional resuscitation. For a single entry point to all official documents, keep the AHA 2025 CPR and ECC Guidelines portal readily available on your clinical devices.