Thirty-four patients with stable angina underwent coronary artery bypass surgery with supplemental intraoperative coronary artery balloon-catheter dilatation. Coronary dilatation was performed on 35 vessels at 50 sites. The balloon catheter could not be passed through one stenotic site. Intimal dissection occurred at two sites, as noted on early postoperative angiographic studies, with resolution on follow-up studies. There was one perioperative myocardial infarction, 100% early relief of angina, and one operative death. Of 25 distal arterial narrowings studied early by angiography (mean, 10 days), 15 (60%) were unchanged, two (8%) were worse, and eight (32%) were improved. Discrete narrowings improved more than diffuse narrowings; in 46% of the former there was an increase in luminal diameter, in comparison to only 17% of the latter. During a maximal 34-month follow-up period, two patients developed recurrent angina and one died of congestive heart failure. Of 13 distal coronary narrowings studied late (mean, 1 year), six (46%) were unchanged, three (23%) were worse, and four (31%) were improved. Postoperative serial catheterization (early and late) of 10 distal narrowings revealed that nine were unchanged and one was worse. Adjunctive intraoperative coronary balloon-catheter dilatation can be performed safely with acceptable clinical results. The procedure may also allow more complete revascularization of the myocardium.