Transcoronary alcohol ablation (TAA) therapy of septal hypertrophy was recently proposed as a therapeutic modality for obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HC). However, questions remain about the effect of TAA on exercise performance. We performed a time-course analysis of exercise capacity and exercise hemodynamics in 20 patients with symptomatic obstructive HC after TAA. Symptom-limited bicycle exercise testing was performed before and 3 and 12 months after TAA, and cardiac catheterization at 3-month follow-up. The pressure gradient of the left ventricular outflow tract immediately decreased from 58 +/- 8 to 4 +/- 1 mm Hg at rest (p <0.01) and from 143 +/- 11 to 30 +/- 6 mm Hg after extrasystole (p <0.01), but partially recovered at 3-month follow-up (14 +/- 4 and 40 +/- 9 mm Hg, respectively). Left ventricular end-diastolic pressure was not changed after TAA. Peak oxygen consumption increased from 19 +/- 2 to 23 +/- 1 ml/kg/min (p < 0.01) and exercise duration from 573 +/- 47 to 742 +/- 46 seconds (p <0.01) at 3-month follow-up, but thereafter reached a plateau. Abnormal patterns of exercise blood pressure response were shown in 9 patients but normalized after TAA. Major complications occurred in 4 patients: no reflow to the left anterior descending coronary artery in 2 patients and ventricular tachycardia requiring cardioversion in 2 patients. During the follow-up period, all patients survived with symptomatic improvement in 17 patients. Thus, TAA is a promising therapeutic modality with improvement in exercise capacity and abnormal exercise blood pressure response in obstructive HC. However, potential serious complications should be considered in the application of TAA.