Twenty-one long-term survivors of out of hospital sudden cardiac death due to ventricular fibrillation underwent radionuclide angiography and myocardial imaging with thallium-201. In 13 patients images were obtained at rest and after maximal treadmill exercise; 11 of these 13 (85 percent) had an image defect in one or both studies. Eleven of the 21 patients (52 percent) had a defect in the image obtained at rest. The magnitude of myocardial image defects was typically great; some patients had an image abnormality without other clinical evidence (angina, S-T depression) of ischemia. The mean ejection fraction, assessed in 16 patients with radionuclide angiography, was 0.41 +/- 0.15 (standard deviation); in 5 of the 16 ejection fraction was normal (more than 0.50) and in 3 it was severely abnormal (less than 0.25). Thus, noninvasive radionuclide studies defined a broad spectrum of ischemic and ventriculographic abnormalities in survivors of sudden cardiac death. Further application of these noninvasive studies may identify those at high risk.