Rest and exercise thallium 201 myocardial scintigraphy and multiple gated radionuclide angiography were correlated with the results of clinical status, exercise electrocardiography, coronary arteriography, and contrast left ventriculography in a series of 12 prospectively studied consecutive patients before and after aortocoronary bypass operation. Patients were divided into two groups based on a comparison between preoperative and postoperative 201T1 scintigrams. Group 1 (6 patients) demonstrated improved or normal postoperative perfusion scintigrams and excellent correlation between the site of a patent graft and the improvement in myocardial perfusion on the postoperative exercise scintigrams. Regional wall motion remained normal in 3 patients and improved in 3. In Group 2 (6 patients) the postoperative 201T1 scintigrams were unchanged or worse. Each patient demonstrated graft occlusion, graft stenosis, distal disease, or a perioperative myocardial infarction. No improvement in regional wall motion occurred in 4 of these 6 patients. Neither the symptomatic response to aortocoronary bypass operation nor the response to exercise testing successfully predicted graft patency.