Experience is reported with 100 consecutive patients in whom percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) was attempted on chronically occluded coronary arteries that had no visible anterograde flow. Ninety-eight patients had angina and all had collateral vessels to the occluded artery on angiography. A movable guidewire/dilatation system was used in all cases. Overall initial PTCA success rate was 56% and was related to duration of occlusion (69% success rate for occlusions of 1 month or less, 50% for 1 to 6 months and 11% after 6 months). Complications were minor; no patient died or required emergency bypass operation. Of the 44 patients in whom PTCA failed, 20 underwent elective bypass surgery for relief of angina and 24 were treated medically. Follow-up at a mean of 8 months (range 1 to 48) was available for 49 of the 56 patients in whom PTCA was successful: 40 had subjective improvement, 6 no change and 3 felt worse. Control angiography was carried out in 40 of the 56 patients with primary success and showed long-term success in 18 and reocclusion or significant stenosis in 22. Of these 22, 11 were successfully treated by a second PTCA, 2 underwent operation and 9 were treated medically. Recanalization of totally occluded coronary arteries with no forward flow has a lower initial success rate (56%) than PTCA for stenoses and the recurrence rate is higher (55%), but effective relief of angina is achieved in successful cases. The risk of serious complications appears to be low.