Dipyridamole testing represents an alternative to exercise stress testing for documentation of ischemia related to coronary artery disease (CAD). In such a case, ischemia is attributed to maldistribution of coronary flow during dipyridamole-induced vasodilation. The present study evaluated the potential role of dipyridamole testing in producing ischemia through a vasospastic mechanism, following rapid withdrawal of vasodilation induced by aminophylline. The possibility was tested in 36 in-hospital patients with variant angina pectoris who underwent dipyridamole infusion (up to 0.84 mg/kg over 10 minutes) with continuous 12-lead electrocardiographic and 2-dimensional echo monitoring. Medications were withdrawn from all patients. The test was pharmacologically stopped with the dipyridamole antidote (aminophylline, 80 to 240 mg intravenously over 1 to 3 minutes) in all patients. Two to 6 minutes after starting aminophylline infusion, 10 patients (28%) developed (greater than 0.10 mV) ST-segment elevation (2.9 +/- 0.8 mm from baseline), always accompanied by obvious asynergy detected by echocardiography, in the same electrocardiographic leads showing spontaneous or ergonovine-induced ST-segment elevation. Nitrates promptly resolved ischemia in all patients. At coronary angiography, 5 of these 10 patients showed significant CAD (greater than 70% lumen diameter reduction of at least 1 major coronary artery), whereas 5 had nonsignificant CAD. The rate pressure product at the onset of ST-segment elevation (after dipyridamole plus aminophylline) was considerably less than that recorded at peak exercise stress test in these patients (9,600 +/- 2,200 vs 18,400 +/- 4,900, p less than 0.01).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)