Exercise-induced changes in haemodynamic values were studied by radionuclide ventriculography in 21 patients with permanent systolic dysfunction (15 with non-obstructive cardiomyopathy and 6 with ischaemic heart disease). The results were compared with those obtained in 8 control subjects with normal heart. In healthy subjects, during exercise the ejection fraction increased due to constant diminution of the end-systolic volume; the end-diastolic volume and the systolic ejection volume did not significantly vary; the cardiac output augmented only because of the accelerated heart rate. In patients with permanent left ventricular dysfunction, the ejection fraction remained unchanged during exercise, whereas the end-systolic volume increased significantly. Yet the systolic ejection volume increased due to a rise in end-diastolic volume. Heart rate and cardiac index increased, but not as much as in normal subjects. There was a close correlation between changes in end-diastolic and end-systolic volumes. It was the relative importance of changes in these two ventricular volumes that determined the direction and amplitude of variations in ejection fraction. It is concluded that in patients with permanent left ventricular dysfunction: (1) the end-systolic volume increases during exercise, thus betraying a worsening of the systolic dysfunction; (2) however, the systolic ejection volume is maintained or increases due to an increase in end-diastolic volume; (3) the changes in ejection fraction observed during exercise are of little value to characterize the modifications that occur in left ventricular work performance.