BACKGROUND The recurrence of transient myocardial ischemia is a frequent event in the course of acute myocardial infarction. Postinfarction angina develops more frequently after a non-Q wave infarction, and after effective thrombolysis; when uncontrolled by standard medical treatment, it is associated with an increased incidence of unfavorable cardiac events. Therapeutic strategies involve aggressive medical therapy, frequent use of early angiography, and mechanical coronary revascularization with bypass surgery or transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA). METHODS We retrospectively examined 68 consecutive patients treated with PTCA for postinfarction angina. Of the whole, 36 (53%) had sustained a non-Q wave infarction; 29 (43%) had been treated with thrombolysis in the acute phase. Ischemia was in the infarction zone in 94% of cases; mean EF was 61.5 +/- 12%, and in 18 cases EF was < 55%. RESULTS In 7 cases two arteries were dilated. There were no deaths related to the procedure. The overall success rate was 91.2%. Major complications occurred in 2 cases (1 acute occlusion with reinfarction, 1 major dissection requiring emergency surgery). The results are analyzed according to the time interval between index infarction and PTCA. In 28 cases (Group A) PTCA was performed within 30 days due to medically refractory symptomatology; in 40 cases (Group B) PTCA was postponed to beyond 30 days from infarction. In Group A involvement of the left anterior descending coronary artery was more frequent (75% of cases vs 40%; p = 0.009). The success rate in Group A was slightly lower than for Group B (85.7% vs 95%); the incidence of complications was higher (7.1% vs 0%), although not statistically different. At 6 month follow-up a restenosis was found in 10 cases (16% of successful PTCAs, 21% of angiographic controls). CONCLUSIONS We conclude that for patients with postinfarction angina, selected for a suitable coronary anatomy, PTCA is an effective therapeutic option, with a high success rate, low immediate morbidity, and good mid-term results. The risk of intraprocedural complications appears only slightly higher for patients with unstable symptoms, who undergo PTCA earlier after infarction.