The purpose of this prospective study was to correlate (1) the initial findings of exercise thallium-201 tomography with the evolution of left ventricular parameters at long term follow-up in patients with dilated cardiomyopathy and (2) the changes of exercise thallium-201 tomography repeated 1 year later. We studied 19 men with dilated cardiomyopathy and normal coronary angiogram. Two patients died and three patients had heart transplantation during follow-up. The other 14 patients were assessed at baseline and 1-year follow-up. Thallium-201 tomograms were divided into 20 segments for each patient. Two groups were defined according to the evolution of left ventricular ejection fraction: group 1 (n = 7) had unchanged or decreased ejection fraction at follow-up (24 +/- 11% at baseline versus 22 +/- 11% at follow-up, ns) and group 2 (n = 7) had improved ejection fraction at follow-up (25 +/- 9% at baseline versus 49 +/- 8% at follow-up, P < 0.03). The number of total abnormal segments at stress were not statistically different at baseline between groups 1 and 2, and in group 1 between baseline and follow-up. Group 2 at follow-up had a reduced number of total abnormal segments (P < 0.03). The percentage of reversibility was similar in both groups at baseline and follow-up. On exercise thallium-201 tomography, neither the presence nor the reversibility of stress myocardial perfusion abnormalities can predict improvement of left ventricular ejection fraction in dilated cardiomyopathy. However, regression of dilated cardiomyopathy is accompanied by a reduction of stress myocardial perfusion abnormalities.