Table 1.
Ref. | No. of patients | Study population | ER pattern | Results |
Tikkanen et al[36], 2009 | 10.864 | Community-based general population of middle-aged subjects | ER was stratified according to the degree of J-point elevation (> or = 0.1 mV or > 0.2 mV) in either inferior or lateral leads | ER pattern in the inferior leads is associated with an increased risk of death from cardiac causes in middle-aged subjects |
Tikkanen et al[35], 2011 | 565 young healthy athletes-10 864 middle- aged subjects | 565 young healthy athletes compared with ECGs from a general population of 10864 middle-aged subjects | ER pattern with horizontal/descending or rapidly ascending/upsloping | ST-segment morphology variants associated with ER separates subjects with and without an increased risk of arrhythmic death in middle-aged subjects. Rapidly ascending ST segments after the J- point, the dominant ST pattern in healthy athletes, seems to be a benign variant of ER |
Uberoi et al[43], 2011 | 29281 | Resting ambulatory ECGs | J-point elevation ≥ 0.1 mV- notching and slurring type in at least 2 lateral or inferior-lateral leads | No significant association between any components of early repolarization and cardiac mortality |
Haïssaguerre et al[10], 2008 | 206 | Patients who were resuscitated after cardiac arrest due to IVF | Elevation of the QRS-ST junction of at least 0.1 mm inferior or lateral lead- QRS slurring or notching | Correlation between ER and sudden cardiac arrest |
Nam et al[41], 2008 | 1410 | 1595 controls and 15 patients with IVF | J-point elevation ≥ 0.1 mV- notching and slurring type in at least 2 lateral or inferior leads | ER pattern is indicative of a highly arrhythmogenic substrate |
Rosso et al[42], 2008 | 290 | 45 patients with idiopathic VF were compared with 124 age- and gender- matched control subjects and with 121 young athletes | J-point elevation ≥ 0.1 mV- notching and slurring type in at least 2 lateral or inferior-lateral leads | J-point elevation is found more frequently among patients with idiopathic VF than among healthy control subjects. The frequency of J-point elevation among young athletes is intermediate |
Rosso et al[29], 2011 | 8980 | 331 patients with IVF and 8.649 controls | J waves > 2 mm | The presence of J waves > 2 mm in amplitude in asymptomatic adults is associated with a threefold increased of arrhythmic death |
Aizawa et al[45], 2012 | 116 | Forty patients with J-wave-associated idiopathic VF compared with 76 non-VF patients | J-wave amplitude was measured in the beat immediately after a pause and compared with the mean J-wave measured in almost three beats before the pause. J waves were defined as those ≥ 0.1 mV above the isoelectric line | Pause-dependent augmentation of J waves was confirmed in about one-half of the patients with idiopathic VF after sudden R-R prolongation. Such dynamicity of J waves was specific to idiopathic VF and may be used for risk stratification |
Cappato et al[37], 2010 | 386 | 21 athletes with a history of previous cardiac arrest of unknown etiology compared with more than 300 healthy athletes | ER pattern with horizontal/descending or rapidly ascending/upsloping | Athletes with a horizontal pattern of ER and ST were 11 times more at risk of cardiac arrest |
Naruse et al[38], 2012 | 220 | patients with AMI | elevation of the QRS-ST junction of > 0.1 mV - 2 inferior or lateral leads- QRS slurring or notching | The presence of ER increased the risk of VF occurrences within 48 hours after the AMI onset |
Rudic et al[40], 2012 | 60 | Patients with AMI | J-point elevation ≥ 0.1 mV- notching and slurring type- in at least 2 lateral or inferior leads | Early repolarization pattern seems to be associated with ventricular tachyarrhythmias in the setting of acute myocardial infarction |
Tikkanen et al[39], 2012 | 964 | 432 consecutive victims of SCD because of acute coronary event and 532 survivors of such an event | elevation of the QRS-ST junction of > 0.1 mV - 2 inferior or lateral leads- QRS slurring or notching | The presence of ER increases the vulnerability to fatal arrhythmia during acute myocardial ischemia |
Wu et al[44], 2013 | meta-analysis | Correlation of ER with a higher risk of arrhythmic death but not of cardiac death or death from other causes |
ER: Early repolarization; IVF: Idiopathic ventricular fibrillation; AMI: Acute myocardial infarction; SCD: Sudden cardiac death.