Ten patients with coronary artery disease and stable angina (mean age fifty-seven) were included in the study. Five of the patients had normal left ventricular function, 5 had local hypokinesia or akinesia; 8 had one-stem and 2 had two-stem disease, but all had left anterior descending (LAD) lesions ranging from 75% to 100%. Ejection fraction varied between 35% and 75% (mean 59%). Immunoreactive atrial natriuretic polypeptide (ANP) levels in the femoral vein (FV) and the coronary sinus (CS) were measured before, immediately after, and up to twenty-four hours after percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) of the LAD. ANP secretion increased by 83% (FV) and 11% (CS) within minutes after PTCA and reached control levels after thirty to sixty minutes. In patients with hypokinesia of the anterior wall, ANP secretion was significantly lower, 48% (FV) and 11% (CS) respectively. ANP secretion during PTCA was higher in patients with concomitant increase in pulmonary capillary pressure (PCP) but was also observed without an increase of PCP, suggesting ventricular ANP secretion. IN conclusion, transient myocardial ischemia leads to immediate ANP secretion even in the absence of significant pressure elevation in the left atrium. As a part of the continuous medical education program of the American College of Angiology the second part of the paper reviews the mechanisms that allow the ischemic heart to counteract the ischemic condition and thus to escape from myocardial infarction. A review of this subject is presently not available in the literature.