A total of 51 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) were studied to determine the tumour vascularity as determined by selective hepatic angiography (HAG) and by intrahepatic-arterial technetium-99m-labeled macroaggregated albumin (Tc99m-MAA) scan. The tumour vascularity was graded on the HAG films by an interventional radiologist using a scale ranging from 1 (hypovascular) to 4 (extremely hypervascular). The grades of vascularity on HAG were grade 1 in 5 patients, grade 2 in 13 patients, grade 3 in 24 patients and grade 4 in 9 patients. The tumour vascularity on scintigraphy was determined by quantifying the count rates over the tumour and normal liver areas by an analog/digital gamma-camera, and the resultant tumour-to-normal ratio (T/N ratio) gave a quantitative measure of the vascularity. The range of the T/N ratio was 0.9 to 11.1, with a median of 3.7. There was no correlation between the tumour vascularity grading on HAG and the T/N ratio on the Tc99m-MAA scan (Wilcoxon rank test, P = 0.83). Thus, we conclude that HAG cannot reveal the true vascularity nor reflect the T/N ratio in HCC.