No flow is an unsolved issue in primary percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) for patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI), and the pathophysiology of no-flow is undetermined. To evaluate the potential participation of coronary thromboembolism in no-flow during primary PTCA, the present study reviewed cinefilms of 256 consecutive patients who underwent primary PTCA for AMI within 24 h after the onset of chest pain between January 1992 and June 1998, focusing on the thrombus size. Angiographic no-flow was defined as the cessation of how into the distal coronary circulation of the treated vessel with a to-and-fro contrast movement, not attributable to high-grade stenosis or spasm of the original target lesion. The coronary thrombus size was determined by using the 2-cm balloon catheter as a reference after crossing the infarct-related occluded artery with a guide wire. Angiographic no-flow was observed in 37 patients (37/256, 14%): 14 of 29 cases (48%) with a large thrombus (greater than or equal to 2 cm) versus 23 of 227 cases (9%) with a small thrombus (<2 cm, 14/29 vs 23/227, p < 0.01). Among 37 patients who experienced angiographic no-flow, overt distal emboli were observed in 14 patients. A thrombolytic agent was used through a guiding catheter in 102 cases prior to or after balloon dilatation to prevent or attenuate distal embolism, particularly in all those cases with a large thrombus (29/29 100%), and angiographic no-flow was seen in 27 cases of this subgroup (27/102, 26%). It is suggested that distal thromboembolism plays an important role in the mechanism of angiographic no-flow during primary PTCA performed for AMI.