Using digitized M-mode echocardiography, the left ventricular (LV) response to acute increase in blood pressure after regression of myocardial hypertrophy due to an effective antihypertensive treatment was evaluated. Fifteen hypertensive patients with basal LV hypertrophy (LV mass greater than 230 g, and normal LV diastolic diameter) and normal LV mass after 3 to 4 months of treatment with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors were selected for study. Subjects performed a cold pressor test before and after therapy. LV systolic function was normal in all subjects. LV diastolic function (impaired at basal evaluation in 13 subjects) improved after therapy in all subjects, with normalization in 10. Before treatment, the cold pressor test induced significant increases in blood pressure and heart rate without changes in LV parameters. After regression of hypertrophy, the cold pressor test induced increases in hemodynamic parameters comparable to those of the basal test, and LV parameters remained unchanged. Our results indicate that regression of myocardial hypertrophy induced by angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors does not impair the ability of the left ventricle to face acute increases in afterload. The improvement in LV diastolic function (found at rest after reversal of hypertrophy) persists during the cold pressor test, which confirms that it is primarily due to LV mass reduction and is not simply a consequence of decrease in afterload induced by treatment.