Seventy-four patients recovering from acute myocardial infarction underwent right atrial pacing before hospital discharge, and treadmill exercise testing 6 months later. The early right atrial pacing test was positive in 32 patients (43 percent) and the late treadmill test was positive in 32 patients (42 percent). The results of the two tests were concordant in 77 percent of the patients, 23 with an ischemic response and 34 with a normal response on both tests. In nine patients a positive right atrial pacing test was followed by a negative treadmill test, and in eight patients a negative pacing test was followed by a positive treadmill test. A positive right atrial pacing test at hospital discharge had an 81.0 percent predictive accuracy for a positive late treadmill test; chest pain, congestive heart failure or increased cardiothoracic ratio at discharge had a predictive value of only 52.9, 42.8 and 42.8 percent, respectively. Both the early right atrial pacing test and the late treadmill test were positive in a significantly higher proportion of patients with inferior or subendocardial infarction than of patients with anterior myocardial infarction. During early right atrial pacing the mean maximal heart rate achieved was higher than that during late treadmill testing (148 versus 133 beats/min) and the mean systolic blood pressure was lower (137 versus 162 mm Hg), but the pressure-rate product was similar on the two tests (20,282 versus 21,455 mm Hg/min). This finding may explain the similar frequency of ischemic responses to the two tests. These results indicate that the response to right atrial pacing soon after myocardial infarction is a good predictor for the presence or absence of an ischemic response to treadmill testing 6 months later. Thus, early right atrial pacing at the time of hospital discharge may be used to determine the pace of rehabilitation and short-term prognosis.