The purposes of this study were to analyze the prognostic significance of precordial ST segment depression and to determine whether thrombolytic therapy is effective for all patients with inferior acute myocardial infarction (AMI) or whether there is a different effectiveness for patients with concomitant anterior ST segment depression persisting for 24 hours or longer. Medical charts of 176 patients were studied. On the basis of ECG the patients were subclassified into three groups according to the presence, persistence, or absence of significant ST segment depression: Group 1: anterior ST segment depression persisting for less than 24 hours (45.4%); Group 2: anterior ST segment depression persisting for more than 24 hours (17.6%); Group 3: no anterior ST segment depression (37%). Age, Killip class, peak creatine kinase, hospital deaths, left ventricular ejection fraction, regional wall motion score, postinfarction angina, and ventricular/supraventricular arrhythmia of all patients were studied. Parameters of the three groups were compared: worse results were found in group 1 and the worst in group 2. This result is independent of thrombolytic therapy. Finally, the same parameters of thrombolyzed and nonthrombolyzed groups were compared: no statistically significant difference was observed. Among thrombolyzed patients the number of those with ST depression lasting more than 24 hours is lower than in nonthrombolyzed patients. It can be assumed that thrombolytic therapy in inferior AMI determines a shifting of patients from a worse prognosis group (ST segment depression persisting for more than 24 hours) to a better prognosis group (ST segment depression persisting for less than 24 hours).