Background: Exercise training is recommended after myocardial infarction (MI) or bypass surgery in order to improve exercise tolerance. In some patients, the decrement in exercise capacity secondary to deconditioning and the left ventricular stunning associated with MI or coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) spontaneously improves after the event. However, the impact of the status of the left ventricle on these improvements is unknown. Methods: Sixty-seven patients 1 month after MI or CABG were randomized to a training (n=34; age, 59+/-7 years) or a control group (n=33; age, 55+/-6 years). Forty-two patients had an ejection fraction >50% (22 in the training group and 20 in the control group), and 25 patients had an ejection fraction <40% (12 in the exercise group and 13 in the control group). After stabilization for approximately 1 month after the event, patients in the exercise group underwent 8 weeks of twice daily exercise at a residential rehabilitation center, while control patients received usual care. Initially and after 8 weeks, patients in both groups underwent maximal exercise testing with gas exchange and lactate analysis. Results: Exercise training increased peak oxygen consumption ((V) over dot o(2)) only in the reduced ejection fraction group (19.4+/-3.0 to 23.9+/-4.8 mL/kg/min; p<0.05); the exercise group with normal ventricular function did not change significantly. Changes in (V) over dot o(2) at the lactate threshold paralleled these of peak (V) over dot o(2) for both groups. Conversely, control patients with normal ventricular function increased peak Ire, spontaneously (20.8+/-3.9 to 24.8+/-3.5 mL/kg/min; p<0.01), whereas control patients with reduced ventricular function did not improve peak (V) over dot o(2). Conclusion: These data suggest that patients with depressed left ventricular function strongly benefit from rehabilitation, whereas most patients with preserved left ventricular function following MI or CABG tend to improve spontaneously 1 to 3 months after the event.