A novel 1.3 mm diameter laser catheter, consisting of 20 concentric 100 microns quartz fibres around a central lumen for a 0.35 mm flexible guide wire, was used to ablate atherosclerotic tissue in thirty patients with coronary artery disease. The laser catheter was coupled to an excimer laser delivering energy at a wavelength of 308 nm and a pulsewidth of 60 ns. The primary success rate was 90% (27 of 30 lesions). The mean (SD) percentage stenosis fell from 85 (15)% to 41 (19)% after laser ablation. In ten patients the lumen diameter after laser angioplasty was considered sufficient, but subsequent balloon angioplasty was carried out for the other twenty patients. Failure to pass the lesion was caused by vessel kinking in two patients and a total occlusion in one patient. No complications directly attributable to laser ablation, such as vessel wall perforation, occurred; one dissection occurred but had no clinical sequelae. There was one early reocclusion and death in a patient with triple vessel disease and unstable angina, probably as a result of plaque rupture after balloon angioplasty. These results are encouraging and justify further clinical investigations.