We evaluated our recent experience with management of neonatal critical pulmonic stenosis and intact ventricular septum between 1982 and 1988. Thirty-nine patients (aged less than 3 months) were treated initially by operation (group A, n = 19) or with balloon pulmonary valvotomy (group B, n = 20). Patients in group A were younger (5 +/- 1.3 versus 18 +/- 4 days in group B) (mean +/- standard error of the mean) and had a greater degree of hypoxia (oxygen tension, 55 +/- 4 versus 80 +/- 6 mm Hg) (p less than 0.05 for all variables). Ten patients in group A and 8 patients in group B had right ventricular hypoplasia, based on an angiographically determined index. Balloon pulmonary valvotomy was attempted in 20 patients at the time of the initial catheterization but was unsuccessful in 9 owing to inability to catheterize the hypoplastic right ventricular outflow tract (n = 8) and to recurrent infundibular stenosis (n = 1). Patients with failed balloon valvotomy were subsequently operated on within 24 hours. The early operative mortality (less than 30 days) was 25% (7 of 28); one death (9%) occurred after successful balloon valvotomy owing to associated critical aortic stenosis. The early postoperative gradient was 20 +/- 2 mm Hg; the post-balloon valvotomy gradient was 18 +/- 3 mm Hg. We conclude that balloon pulmonary valvotomy yields good results in patients with critical pulmonary stenosis with essentially normal-sized right ventricle, whereas surgical pulmonary valvotomy is required for patients with right ventricular hypoplasia.