From April 1996 to October 1998, 250 patients with a mean age of 63 years (31-86 years) underwent coronary artery bypass grafting using the off-pump technique. The prime reason for using this technique was the need to minimize the surgical trauma by avoiding extracorporeal circulation. Fifty-seven percent of the patients had 1-vessel disease, 39% had 2-vessel disease and 4% 3-vessel disease. Sternotomy was performed in 196 patients and an anterior mini-thoracotomy in 54 patients. The mean number of coronary anastomoses was 1.5. Perioperative mortality was 0.4%. The first consecutive 87 patients underwent an early postoperative coronary angiography (days 1-5) revealing a graft patency of 96.5%. Five out of the 7 patients with occluded grafts subsequently underwent another intervention (surgical revascularization in 4 patients and percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty in one); 1.2% developed transmural myocardial infarction and 2.8% were reoperated upon for bleeding. The mean time of ventilatory support was 2.5+/-0.5 h. The mean ICU time for all patients was 12 h (0-10 days). The mean in-hospital time was 7 days (2-30 days). Coronary artery bypass surgery without the use of extracorporeal circulation is a safe procedure that can be performed with limited need for intensive care resources. However, long-term results remain to be investigated.