Exposure to tobacco smoke is known to have deleterious cardiovascular effects. In this study, we tested whether exposure to tobacco smoke exacerbates the severity of viral myocarditis in mice. Viral myocarditis was generated in 4-week-old male BALB/c mice by injection of Encephalomyocarditis virus (EMCV). Four groups were studied: (1) control (C, no smoke and no virus); (2) smoke only (S, exposure to cigarette smoke for 90 min/day for 15 days); (3) virus only (V); and (4) exposure to smoke for 5 days before plus 10 days following virus injection (S+V). We found that viral inoculation preceded by smoke exposure increased mortality more than twofold compared with virus inoculation alone. In addition, the mRNA level of atrial natriuretic factor was significantly higher in S+V than among any of the other 3 groups. Virus injection significantly decreased cardiac function compared with controls, with further deterioration observed in the S+V group. We also observed a significantly increased rate of apoptosis, with an increased activation of apoptosis-inducing factor in hearts exposed to S+V compared with those exposed to V alone. Our results suggest that preexposure to smoke significantly exacerbates the severity of viral myocarditis, likely through increased viral load and increased cardiomyocyte cell death.