Between 1976 and 1980, 301 of 3106 patients in the cardiological intensive-care unit were treated for acute cardiac arrest (9.7%). As a result of better methods of prevention and the emergency doctor system, there has since 1968 been a 50% reduction in the number of cardiac arrests. Two-thirds of the patients were male, resuscitation was successful in 34% ("successful" means that the patient was transferred to a general ward from the intensive-care unit in a clinically and haemodynamically stable condition). The prognosis was better in those with posterior-wall myocardial infarction than in those with unstable angina, mitral-valve disease with congestive heart failure, and those with anterior-wall infarction, the latter generally being more extensive and thus in principle more dangerous than posterior-wall infarction. Cardiac arrest as part of cardiogenic shock proved irreversible in every instance. After three months the survival rate was 72%, after six months 66%, after one year 62% of all patients who had required resuscitation. They would not have been alive without intensive-care treatment. These figures contradict negative comments on the purpose and usefulness of cardiological intensive-care units.