Although the utility of stress echocardiography for the diagnosis and prognostic evaluation of patients with suspected coronary artery disease (CAD) has been widely reported, few studies have evaluated the role of revascularization in relation to the presence of inducible ischemia during stress in patients with known CAD. The study population consisted of 295 consecutive patients who underwent transesophageal atrial pacing stress echocardiography (TAPSE) in the echocardiographic laboratory of our division between January 1988 and September 1997, in whom coronary angiography was performed within 10 days of the test. Patients were then assigned to revascularization or medical treatment according to the treatment given within 60 days of TAPSE. Cardiac-related deaths were higher in medically treated (19 of 135) than in revascularized (8 of 160) patients (p = 0.03). Parameters measured with TAPSE, i.e., positivity of the test, change in wall motion score index (DeltaWMSI and peak WMSI) were significantly related to mortality in medically treated patients but not in revascularized patients. At multivariate analysis, DeltaWMSI remained the most powerful predictor of cardiac death in medically treated patients (p = 0.005). Mortality progressively increased with increments in extent of inducible ischemia among medically treated patients (5 of 71 patients in DeltaWMSI 0, 3 of 27 in DeltaWMSI 0 to 25, 11 of 37 patients in DeltaWMSI >25) but not among revascularized patients (3 of 58 patients in DeltaWMSI 0, 2 of 51 in DeltaWMSI 0 to 25, 3 of 51 patients in DeltaWMSI >25). The survival curve in medically treated patients with ischemia in a remote zone (24 patients, 8 deaths) was worse than in other groups of medically treated patients (41 patients, 6 deaths). In conclusion, in patients with known CAD, the presence and extent of ischemia as evaluated with TAPSE worsens survival, if revascularization is not performed. In patients without ischemia at TAPSE, revascularization or medical therapy are equally effective.