Myocardial revascularization was performed in 56 patients with coronary artery disease who presented with ventricular tachycardia (VT) (n = 39) or ventricular fibrillation (n = 17). There were 46 men and 10 women, aged 65 +/- 10 years. Three vessel (n = 42) or left main disease (n = 4) was present in 82%. Left ventricular ejection fraction averaged 36% +/- 11%. Electrophysiological studies were performed preoperatively in all patients; 50 (89%) had inducible ventricular arrhythmias. Sustained monomorphic VT was induced in 40 patients (cycle length 284 +/- 61 msec). Reproducible symptomatic nonsustained VT was induced in four patients and ventricular fibrillation in six patients, while six patients had no inducible arrhythmia. Preoperatively the patients with inducible VT failed 3.3 +/- 1.2 drug trials during electrophysiological studies. In addition to coronary bypass, 22 patients also received an automatic implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD), 26 patients received prophylactic ICD patches, and 1 patient had resection of a false aneurysm. There were no perioperative deaths. Postoperative electrophysiological studies were performed in all 56 surgical survivors. Ventricular tachyarrhythmia could not be induced in the six patients who had no inducible VT preoperatively and in 13 of 40 (33%) with preoperatively inducible sustained VT or in 19 of 50 (38%) patients with any previously inducible ventricular arrhythmia, thus a total of 25 patients (45%) had no inducible VT postoperatively. Of the remaining, 11 patients were treated with antiarrhythmic drugs alone, 11 had already received an ICD (combined with drugs in 7), and another 9 received the ICD postoperatively (combined with drugs in 4). At a mean follow-up of 28 +/- 21 months there were 11 deaths (20%): 2 sudden, 5 nonsudden cardiac, and 4 noncardiac deaths. There were 16 nonfatal VT recurrences (29%): 14 among patients with persistently inducible arrhythmias, and only 2 among those with no inducible arrhythmia postoperatively (P = 0.004); 13 occurred in patients with an ICD (P = 0.01). Thus among these patients with malignant ventricular arrhythmias who underwent revascularization, 45% had no inducible arrhythmia postoperatively with 33% of those with preoperatively inducible sustained VT apparently rendered noninducible by revascularization, while the majority (70%) remained free of major arrhythmic events during long-term follow-up. We conclude that myocardial revascularization alone can result in no ventricular arrhythmia induction in selected patients with VT inducible prior to surgery. Long-term follow-up of such patients indicates a low sudden death and arrhythmia recurrence rate. Furthermore, in patients with persistently inducible ventricular tachyarrhythmias after coronary revascularization, the sudden death rate is low despite a high frequency of nonfatal arrhythmia recurrence when antiarrhythmic medications are guided by programmed stimulation or an ICD is used.