The detectability of diagonal branch disease in 10 patients (five with angina pectoris, five with myocardial infarction) with isolated diagonal branch lesions (more than 75% luminal stenosis in coronary angiography) was reviewed. In exercised 201TlCl myocardial scintigraphy, chest pain occurred in four of 10 patients, electrocardiographic change indicating myocardial ischemia was seen in four, and diagonal branch lesion was detected in only four patients by planar images. In contrast, diagonal branch lesions were detected in 10 of 10 patients by SPECT (single photon emission computed tomography). In planar images, perfusion defects appeared high in the anterolateral, posterolateral, and anterior walls of the left ventricle. In SPECT images they appeared high in the anterior to anterolateral wall. The extent of diagonal branch lesions could be quantitatively evaluated by coronary territory maps developed from unfolded maps of exercised SPECT. The mean ratio of the extent of diagonal branch lesion to left anterior descending branch territory was 24.7%, and the extent of myocardial infarction was significantly larger than that of angina pectoris (p < 0.05). In conclusion, SPECT is useful for detecting diagonal branch lesions and can quantitatively show the extent of these lesions by coronary territory map.