Seventy patients surviving a myocardial infarction complicated by heart failure or arrhythmias, or both, were studied 7 to 20 days after the infarction. Twenty-four hour electrocardiographic ambulatory monitoring and intracardiac electrophysiologic studies were performed in each patient. Electrophysiologic studies included introduction of single right ventricular premature stimuli during sinus rhythm (70 patients), atrial pacing (35 patients) and ventricular pacing (70 patients) at a stimulating voltage of 2 V, with the use of higher stimulating voltages (up to 10 V), and double right ventricular premature stimuli in 33 patients and pacing at a second right ventricular site in 50 patients. A repetitive response was defined as two or more spontaneous ventricular depolarizations in response to the premature stimuli, with His bundle reentry and aberrant conduction of supraventricular impulses excluded by a His bundle recording. Repetitive responses were initiated in 20 patients, and 12 patients had responses that were either sustained ventricular tachycardia or self-terminating ventricular tachycardia of more than five complexes in duration. The finding of a repetitive response was not related to the occurrence of complex ventricular arrhythmias during ambulatory monitoring or in the coronary care unit. Five of the 12 patients with sustained or self-terminating responses of more than five complexes died during the 12 month follow-up period, 4 suddenly, and these responses were significantly associated with late sudden death (p less than 0.05), because only 1 of 25 patients with responses of fewer than five complexes or no response to maximal provocation died suddenly. It is concluded that induced responses of more than five complexes in duration may be an important indicator of a potentially reversible risk of sudden death after myocardial infarction.