Three hundred forty consecutive patients (mean age 69 +/- 9 years) were evaluated with adenosine tomographic thallium-201 scintigraphy for suspected coronary artery disease. Minor side effects occurred in 91% of patients. Out of 28 patients (8%) with potentially serious side effects, 28 had significant atrioventricular (AV) block (second-degree, 24 patients; third-degree, four patients; syncope occurred in two patients). Acute bronchospasm and severe refractory angina pectoris occurred in one patient each. All side effects were transient and without sequelae. One hundred twenty-one patients underwent coronary angiography within 9 days of adenosine thallium imaging. The predictive accuracies of adenosine thallium imaging for identifying and localizing ischemia to a specific coronary distribution were: left anterior descending = 88%, left circumflex = 84%, right coronary = 88%. The predictive accuracy of adenosine thallium imaging in patients with left bundle branch block was 91%, and was higher than the 71% predictive accuracy noted in 39 patients who underwent exercise thallium testing (p = 0.04). It is concluded that adenosine thallium-201 myocardial scintigraphy was (1) highly accurate for the detection and localization of significant coronary artery disease; (2) it was more accurate at detecting ischemia in patients with left bundle branch block than exercise thallium testing, and (3) subjective side effects were common and were of no diagnostic importance; transient AV block occurred occasionally.