We studied the wall motion of the noninfarcted area and its role in left ventricular remodeling. The study group consisted of 43 patients with a first Q-wave acute myocardial infarction and single-vessel disease. Cardiac catheterization was performed at the first week, and was repeated-six months later. Left ventricular volumes, wall motion at the infarcted and noninfarcted area, ejection fraction and infarction-related artery status were quantified. Hyperkinesia was only found at the first week in 22% of cases, and at the sixth month in 26% of cases. Wall motion at the noninfarcted area correlated with wall motion at the infarcted area (one week: r=0.53 p<0.0001; six months: r=0.52 p=0.01), ejection fraction (one week: r=0.69 p<0.0001; six months: r=0.56 p=0.006), end-diastolic volume (one week. r=-0.48 p=0.002; six months: r=-0.48 p=0.02) and end-systolic volume (one week:,r=-0.70 p<0.0001; six months: r=-0.63 p=0.001). The improvement of the noninfarcted area (from the first week to the sixth month) was only related to basal (one week) wall motion in this area (r= -0.58 p=0.003). We conclude that after an intermediate-large infarction, most patients exhibit a normal or hypokinetic noninfarcted area. Patients with a more depressed infarcted area show poorer contractility at the noninfarcted area. Hypokinesia at the noninfarcted area is independently related to more enlarged volumes. Those cases with a more depressed noninfarcted area exhibit greater progressive improvement. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.