This study examined the role of fibrinolytic components in the process of restenosis after percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA). Seventy-two patients with single-vessel disease who underwent successful PTCA were prospectively selected. Tissue plasminogen activator (TPA), free plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (free PAI-1), TPA/PAI-1 complex, and total PAI-1 antigen levels were measured before, at 1 week after, and at 3 months after PTCA. Six months after PTCA, the study patients were divided into two groups: 41 patients without restenosis and 31 patients with restenosis. There were no significant differences with regard to sex, age, coronary risk factors, or morphologic changes in the target lesions between the two groups. There were no significant differences in plasma TPA, TPA/PAI-1 complex, or total PAI-1 levels at each sampling period, or in the time courses between the two groups, except for total PAI-1 levels at 1 week after PTCA. Although no significant differences in free PAI-1 levels before PTCA were observed, free PAI-1 levels after PTCA in the patients with restenosis were significantly higher than those in the patients without restenosis. In addition, each group had a significant change in the time course of free PAI-1 levels. The results suggest that impaired fibrinolysis early after PTCA might affect the repair process of vascular injury, which leads to restenosis, and also that serial determination of free PAI-1 levels could help predict restenosis.