Abstract

BackgroundThe early repolarization pattern (ERP) in electrocardiography (ECG) has been considered as a risk for ventricular fibrillation (VF), but effective methods for identification of malignant ERP are still required. We investigated whether high spatiotemporal resolution 64‐channel magnetocardiography (MCG) would enable distinction between benign and malignant ERPs.MethodsAmong all 2,636 subjects who received MCG in our facility, we identified 116 subjects (43 ± 18 years old, 54% male) with inferior and/or lateral ERP in ECG and without structural heart disease, including 13 survivors of VF (ERP‐VF(+)) and 103 with no history of VF (ERP‐VF(−)). We measured the following MCG parameters in a time‐domain waveform of relative current magnitude: (a) QRS duration (MCG‐QRSD), (b) root‐mean‐square of the last 40 ms (MCG‐RMS40), and (c) low amplitude (<10% of maximal) signal duration (MCG‐LAS).ResultsCompared to ERP‐VF(−), ERP‐VF(+) subjects presented a significantly longer MCG‐QRS (108 ± 24 vs. 91 ± 23 ms, p = .02) and lower MCG‐RMS40 (0.10 ± 0.08 vs. 0.25 ± 0.20, p = .01) but no difference in MCG‐LAS (38 ± 22 vs. 29 ± 23 ms, p = .17). MCG‐QRSD and MCG‐RMS40 showed significantly larger area under the ROC curve compared to J‐peak amplitude in ECG (0.72 and 0.71 vs. 0.50; p = .04 and 0.03). The sensitivity, specificity, and odds ratio for identifying VF(+) based on MCG‐QRSD ≥ 100 ms and MCG‐RMS40 ≤ 0.24 were 69%, 74%, and 6.33 (95% CI, 1.80–22.3), and 92%, 48%, and 10.9 (95% CI, 1.37–86.8), respectively.ConclusionMagnetocardiography is an effective tool to distinguish malignant and benign ERPs.

Highlights

  • Repolarization pattern (ERP) characterized by an end-of-QRS notch or slur in 12-lead electrocardiography (ECG) is a common ECG finding, occurring in approximately 3%–24% of the general population and in young male subjects or athletes

  • Accumulating evidence has raised the possibility of increased arrhythmic risk in patients in whom early repolarization pattern (ERP) is incidentally identified through routine ECG recordings

  • MCG-QRSD was significantly larger (108 ± 24 vs. 91 ± 23 ms, p = .02) and MCG-RMS40 was significantly smaller (0.10 ± 0.08 vs. 0.25 ± 0.20, p = .01) in the ERP-ventricular fibrillation (VF)(+) group compared to the ERP-VF(−) group, but no difference in MCG-low amplitude signal (LAS) was seen between the two groups (38 ± 22 vs. 29 ± 23 ms, p = .17; Table 1)

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Repolarization pattern (ERP) characterized by an end-of-QRS notch or slur in 12-lead electrocardiography (ECG) is a common ECG finding, occurring in approximately 3%–24% of the general population and in young male subjects or athletes. It has been associated with ventricular fibrillation (VF) for the past decade (Haissaguerre et al, 2008; Tikkanen et al, 2009; Wu, Lin, Cheng, Qiang, & Zhang, 2013). Late fields of the QRS complexes in MCG showed higher performance in detecting lethal arrhythmic risk in patients with prior myocardial infarction than signal-averaged ECG (SAECG; Korhonen et al, 2000, 2002). This study investigated whether high spatiotemporal resolution 64-channel MCG could reveal arrhythmogenicities of ERP and could be used as a means of distinguishing malignant ERPs from benign ones

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