Seventeen patients with coronary heart disease were included in a double-blind randomized study. They received either 5 mg of carvedilol or 6 mg of propranolol intravenously. Heart rate, aortic pressure, mean coronary sinus pressure and coronary flow (thermodilution) were measured, and coronary resistance and rate-pressure product were calculated before and 15 min after the infusion, which lasted 10 min. Carvedilol lowered significantly (p less than 0.05) heart rate (mean 76 to 69/min), aortic pressure (mean 153/80 to 135/72 mm Hg), rate-pressure product (mean 117 to 93 mm Hg/min) and coronary flow (mean 114 to 94 ml/min). Coronary resistance and coronary flow related to rate-pressure product showed no significant change after carvedilol. Propranolol lowered heart rate (mean 76 to 64/min; p less than 0.05) and rate-pressure product (mean 109 to 96 mm Hg/min; ns). Aortic pressure, coronary flow, coronary resistance, and coronary flow related to rate-pressure product showed no significant change after propranolol. Thus, carvedilol lowered rate-pressure product more markedly than propranolol on account of its acute blood-pressure lowering effect. Neither drug seems to have a direct influence on coronary resistance vessels.