Harmonic imaging is a new imaging modality using nonlinear acoustic response, which is particularly sensitive for the particles of contrast agents. Our study was designed to compare the potential of harmonic echocardiographic imaging of the left ventricle using a contrast agent, Levovist to improve the detection of endocardium in patients with suboptimal image quality. 40 patients were studied using standard transthoracic apical views of the left ventricle patients using fundamental frequency and second harmonic frequency after and intravenous injection of 2.5 g Levovist. The quality of endocardial delineation in 16 standard segments was scored from 0 to 2. Endocardial visualization index was calculated as a mean of the scores to express overall diagnostic quality. Harmonic imaging with contrast significantly improved left ventricular endocardial border detection (endocardial visualization index at baseline 1.24 +/- 0.41, with contrast 1.63 +/- 0.38; p < 0.001). The improvement was qualitatively observed in all parts of the left ventricle: in apex (2.4 +/- 0.8), in the middle part (2.5 +/- 0.9) and slightly less in the basal part (2.1 +/- 1.1) as scored on a 0-3 scale. The number of invisible segments decreased from 124 (fundamental) to 50 in contrast harmonic mode. The persistence of the contrast enhancement, prolonged in harmonic as compared to fundamental imaging (284 +/- 136s vs 117 +/- 87s; p < 0.001) enabled convenient recording of all necessary views. Harmonic imaging after an intravenous injection of Levovist significantly improves the visualization of left ventricular endocardial border. Prolonged contrast effect after a single bolus enhances the pertinence of the method in clinical practice.