Sympathomimetic agents have been used clinically to elicit regional dysfunction or heterogeneity of coronary blood flow to detect coronary artery lesions. However, the usefulness of this procedure in detecting mild to moderate coronary stenoses has not been defined previously. This was investigated in 10 open chest anesthetized dogs using subendocardial ultrasonic crystals to measure segment lengths. An electromagnetic flow probe was placed on the proximal left anterior descending artery, and graded coronary stenoses were created using a cuff occluder. In the first phase of the study, subcritical coronary stenoses were created which impaired maximal postocclusion reactive hyperemia, but not coronary blood flow at rest. A constant infusion of dopamine (average 15 micrograms/kg per min) was then administered. Regional dysfunction during dopamine infusion was not consistently observed despite production of coronary stenoses resulting in total loss of reactive hyperemia at rest. Regional function during dopamine treatment was, however, critically related to the actual changes in coronary blood flow during the infusion. In the second phase of the study, regional function during dopamine challenge was investigated during progressive impairments of coronary blood flow. Regional function was maintained until coronary blood flow during the infusion was reduced to near rest levels below which regional function deteriorated rapidly.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)