At least 350000 people will suffer cardiac arrest each year in the united States, I every 90 seconds. Many will then undergo cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) by bystanders and emergency medical services in a desperate attempt to restore life. Numerous studies rets port that the majority of these efforts will not succeed. Prolonged anoxia, the inability to restore spontaneous circulation, neurological devastation, and other complications combine to limit survival. Nonetheless, thousand will surmount these obstacles and resume normal lives. CPR is a triumph of medicine but also is frequently performed in vain. It is a young science; the term CPR was first publicized less than 50 years ago. The roots of resuscitation, however, extend back centuries, with a gradual course of evolution that has been periodically impeded by rejection of inadequate techniques, curiously slow adoption of proven interventions, and even a cyclic process of abandonment and subsequent rediscovery. Examining the history of resuscitation is an essential first step to understanding and following the evolution to modem practices. A detailed review of more current observations, inventions, and clinical trials, in the context of the disappointing statistics of conventional CPR, will elucidate the rationale behind the most recently published resuscitation guides, as well as provide fuel for future research. Although components of life support apply to the predominantly asphyxia-related arrests seen in pediatrics, the focus of this review is on resuscitation after cardiopulmonary arrest in the adult.