Intravenous nicardipine, 5 mg, was infused over 5 minutes in 2 comparable groups of 8 patients with chronic coronary artery disease but no clinical signs of heart failure. Eight patients had received no previous treatment and served as a control group; 8 other patients had received long-term treatment with large doses of propranolol. The hemodynamic responses to nifedipine were similar in the 2 groups, but was greater in patients taking propranolol. At 10 minutes, systemic vascular resistance decreased by 47% in patients taking propranolol and by 39% in the control group; mean aortic pressures decreased by 25% and 10%; heart rate increased by 23% and 19%; and cardiac index increased by 45% in both groups. At 20 minutes, left ventricular end-systolic volume index decreased by 20% in patients taking propranolol and 15% in the control patients; angiographic stroke index increased by 19% and 8%; left ventricular ejection fraction increased by 22% and 11%; and mean circumferential fiber velocity increased by 46% and 32%. Intravenous nicardipine infusion (5 mg) did not induce negative inotropic effects in patients with chronic coronary heart disease, and no evidence of congestive heart failure was seen, even in patients receiving large doses of propranolol. Nicardipine counteracted the potential deleterious effects of propranolol; increased peripheral vascular resistance and left ventricular stroke work and decreased cardiac output.