The rote of the single dose technique of myocardial perfusion imaging with thallium-201 in evaluating patients with suspected coronary artery disease was studied in 128 patients undergoing diagnostic coronary arteriography. Significant coronary disease (70 percent or more luminal stenosis) was present in 95 patients. Exercise scans were compared with 4 hour redistribution scans for the presence of new defects with exercise. Myocardial perfusion imaging was significantly more sensitive (85 versus 64 percent, P < 0.01) and more accurate (84 versus 71 percent, P < 0.05) than stress electrocardiography in detecting coronary disease. The patients were classified into two groups: group I,89 patients with diagnostically adequate stress electrocardiograms (that is, positive for ischemia or negative at 85 percent or more predicted maximal heart rate), and group II, 39 patients with nondiagnostic stress electrocardiograms (that is, uninterpretable because of intraventricular conduction disturbance or inadequate because of absence of ischemic S-T depression but failure to achieve 85 percent of predicted maximal heart rate). The sensitivity (87 percent), specificity (85 percent) and accuracy (87 percent) of myocardial perfusion imaging in detecting coronary disease in group I were not significantly different from the results of stress electrocardiography alone (88 percent sensitivity, 85 percent specificity and 88 percent accuracy). in group II scintigraphy was 81 percent sensitive, 69 percent specific and 77 percent accurate in detecting coronary disease; these results were not significantly different from those in group I. These data indicate that myocardial perfusion imaging with thallium-201 is more sensitive and more accurate than stress electrocardiography in detecting coronary artery disease but offers no advantage for this purpose in patients with diagnostically adequate stress electrocardiograms. © 1979.