Two-dimensional echocardiography was used for diagnosing coronary vasospasm during the cold pressor stress test immediately after hyperventilation in five patients with suspected vasospastic angina. The test consisted of hyperventilation for 6 min and cold water pressor for 2 min under continuous electrocardiographic and echocardiographic monitoring. Coronary angiography with intracoronary injection of acetylcholine was performed in all patients within 1 month after the stress test. During the stress test, new asynergies of both the anterior and inferior walls were seen in three of the five patients, and new asynergy of the anterior wall in the other two patients. All acetylcholine induced coronary artery spasms occurred at the same locations as the new asynergies provoked by the stress test. In three patients, wall motion abnormality occurred earlier than ST segment elevation, and the other two patients had no ST changes. Chest pain was induced in three patients and delayed in comparison to electrocardiographic and echocardiographic changes. Echocardiographic monitoring during the stress test could detect spasms unaccompanied by either ST segment changes or chest pain, and could detect multivessel coronary spasms. Hyperventilation and cold pressor stress echocardiography may be used for the diagnosis of vasospastic angina.