In patients with recurrent symptoms > or = 1 year after successful percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA), the decision of whether to proceed directly with coronary angiography or to evaluate the patient noninvasively can be difficult. To determine which demographic, historical, clinical, and laboratory factors are useful in helping to make this decision, 76 consecutive patients who presented > 1 year (768 +/- 309 days) after successful PTCA with resolution of symptoms were studied. The initial PTCA successfully treated all stenoses (except chronically occluded vessels) in all major vessels and segments. The patient group was predominantly men (68%), with a mean age of 64 +/- 10 years. A prior myocardial infarction was present in 39 patients (51%), and there was a mean of 2.8 risk factors per patient. In patients who presented with recurrent symptoms, the Canadian Cardiovascular Society functional class was 2.0 +/- 0.9; 2 patients presented with acute infarctions, 57 were admitted to the hospital with unstable angina, and 17 had stable angina. New electrocardiographic changes at rest were found in 19 of 74 patients (26%) with recurrent angina. A thallium stress test was performed in 40 patients (53%), with a sensitivity of 77% and a specificity of 36% for the presence of a significant stenosis. No nonangiographic variable was predictive of angiographic findings. At angiography, the number of coronary arteries with > or = 50% diameter narrowing was 1.4 +/- 1.0. Forty-two patients had stenosis at a new site, 7 had restenosis, and 27 had no new stenoses.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)