Spontaneous coronary artery dissection is rare compared with the high incidence of atheromatous coronary artery disease. Eight new clinical and angiographic cases diagnosed between 1984 and 1990 are reported. The patients were 6 men and 2 women with an average age of 44.1 +/- 10.7 years. The initial presentation is angina in half the cases, and myocardial infarction in the other half. Clinical signs and the results of non-invasive investigations are non-specific. Diagnosis is made by coronary angiography. The dissection is usually observed on a proximal segment of one of the main coronary arteries. In 5 cases, the disease was confined to a single vessel left anterior descending (3) and right coronary arteries (2). One patient had double vessel disease (left anterior descending and left retroventricular arteries); one patient had triple vessel disease (left anterior descending left circumflex and right coronary arteries), and finally, one patient had left main stem disease extending to the left anterior descending and first diagonal arteries. There was no aetiological factor in 5 cases whereas 3 had coronary atherosclerosis. After a period of 25 months all patients are alive. Five have drug therapy and 3 have undergone coronary bypass surgery. Six patients are asymptomatic and 2 have mild angina. One patient's coronary circulation has returned to normal. The extension of the indication of coronary angiography explains the diagnosis of an increasing number of spontaneous coronary artery dissection. The condition is serious but there are more and more long-term survivors as in our series.