In patients with aortic valve regurgitation anginal pain without coronary artery disease is a consequence of both impairment of coronary flow (CF) reserve and reduction of diastolic CF (D) due to a diminished coronary perfusion pressure (CPP). Aim of this study was to evaluate with transesophageal multiplane echocardiography CF pattern in 15 patients with severe aortic regurgitation (AR) in the operative room before and after aortic valve replacement and to correlate it with hemodynamic parameters of left ventricular systolic (echocardiographic fractional shortening area) and diastolic (Doppler E/A ratio of mitral flow and X/Y ratio of pulmonary venous flow; pulmonary wedge pressure) function. Patients were compared to a control group (C) of 10 subjects. Coronary flow was divided into systolic (S), protodiastolic (PD) and end-diastolic (ED) components. In AR we observed a reduction in D/S ratio (2.6 +/- 1.3 versus 3.5 +/- 0.8, NS) and an increase in PD/ED ratio (2.24 +/- 2.8 versus 1.05 +/- 0.15, p < 0.001). A positive correlation was observed between PD/ED ratio and left ventricular diastolic impairment (E/A ratio: r = 0.71, p < 0.001; wedge pressure: r = 0.70, p < 0.001) and a negative correlation with CPP (r = -0.6, p < 0.02). Forty-five min after aortic valve replacement diastolic function improvement and CPP increase were associated with a normalization of CF pattern (D/S = 4.35 +/- 1.9/PD/ED = 1.06 +/- 0.16). In conclusion in AR diastolic dysfunction and abnormal CPP are strictly related to the reduction in diastolic CF; valve replacement normalizes the former two parameters and redistributes CF in late diastole.