We aimed to assess the specificity and sensitivity of (99m)technetium pyrophosphate muscle scintigraphy in the diagnostic workup of patients with suspected myopathy. We reviewed the charts of 166 patients; 52% of the subjects had myalgias, 36% had muscle weakness, 45% had an elevated serum creatine kinase (CK), and 49% had an increased C reactive protein (CRP). Scintigraphy was positive in 34 patients (20%). The test was more sensitive in the presence of muscle weakness, elevated CK, or increased CRP. The presence of myalgias did not influence the odds. Sensitivity was 60% in patients with the final diagnosis of polymyositis, dermatomyositis, or inclusion body myositis, and 70% in noninflammatory myopathies. Eight percent had false positive scintigrams. In individuals with biopsy-proven myopathy (51 subjects), the diagnostic sensitivity was 43%, and its specificity was 60%. Low positive and high negative likelihood ratios (5.0 and 0.65, respectively) document an only limited diagnostic efficiency of (99m)Tc-PYP scintigraphy in the evaluation of inflammatory and noninflammatory myopathies and suggest that the test is not helpful in the routine diagnostic workup of muscle complaints, even after a priori selection of patients for CK plus CRP abnormalities.