In a 4-year period, 84 patients who were referred for a dipyridamole thallium-201 stress test to rule out significant coronary artery disease had normal scans. A dipyridamole study was recommended instead of exercise because of arthritis, severe obesity, peripheral vascular disease, pulmonary disease, other chronic illnesses, or combinations of these problems. All patients had three-view (i.e., anterior, shallow left anterior oblique, and steep left anterior oblique) planar thallium-201 imaging 10 minutes and 3.5 hours after administration of 0.6 mg/kg of intravenous dipyridamole. The patients were followed for 42 +/- 13 (range 1-58) months to document the cardiac event rate. Of the 84 patients with normal results, 14 died during the follow-up period from noncardiac causes. Three other patients died 29-51 months after the test due to an acute myocardial infarction, a probable acute myocardial infarction, and sudden cardiac death, respectively. Of the survivors, 5 suffered an acute myocardial infarction 28-50 months after the dipyridamole thallium scan and 1 had coronary artery bypass grafting due to increasing angina pectoris 58 months after the scan (overall cardiac event rate of 0.4% per year). Of the remaining 61 patients, 39 (64%) were asymptomatic, 20 (33%) had the same symptoms they had at the time of testing without significant deterioration, while 2 patients (3%) had deterioration of their chest pains but no cardiac complication. Thus, in this group of patients, a normal dipyridamole thallium-201 perfusion scan predicted a good cardiovascular outcome for at least 24 months following the test.