Left ventricular ejection fractions and regional ejection changes obtained from left ventriculograms at rest were analyzed in 15 normal subjects, in 17 patients with isolated, organic left anterior descending coronary artery disease, and in 11 patients with isolated left anterior descending coronary artery spasm. Patients with coronary artery spasm did not have significant organic lesions at the site of spasm. All patients with organic coronary artery disease and coronary artery spasm had a history of angina pectoris without myocardial infarction. No significant differences in ejection fraction were observed among the three groups. The regional ejection change of the anterolateral and apical wall supplied by the left anterior descending coronary artery was significantly decreased in patients with organic coronary artery disease compared with those in normal subjects (anterolateral 39.5 +/- 10.3% vs 48.4 +/- 7.7%, p less than 0.05; apical 48.4 +/- 8.8% vs 55.6 +/- 7.8%, p less than 0.05). However, the anterolateral and apical wall motion was not impaired in patients with coronary artery spasm. Thus, patients with organic coronary artery disease had impairment of left ventricular wall motion, while those with coronary artery spasm did not, although both groups of patients had symptoms of angina. These results suggest that patients with organic coronary artery disease may have had coronary blood flow disturbances through stenosed vessels and chronic active ischemia that produced left ventricular impairment.