A case of aortic valve stenosis without coronary artery disease was confirmed to have diffuse subendocardial ischemia by exercise Thallium-201 myocardial single photon emission computed tomography. A 72-year-old woman, who had been diagnosed as aortic valve stenosis, was admitted because of chest pain during exercise. In cardiac catheterization findings, the patient angiographically had normal coronary arteries and no asynergy of left ventricular wall motion. The peak flow velocity in continuous wave Doppler echocardiography was about 5.0 m/sec at aortic valve level, providing a pressure drop of 100 mmHg across a stenotic valve with calculating on a modified Bernoulli equation (PG = 4V2). Thallium-201 myocardial SPECT images during exercise showed a transient "dilation and a widespread wall thinning" of left ventricle with apical perfusion defect. Simultaneous electrocardiogram showed further ST depression and the patient had chest pain. In 6 months after aortic valve replacement the patient no longer demonstrated both apical perfusion defect and "wall thinning" in postoperative thallium-201 myocardial SPECT images and also had neither ST depression nor chest pain. Thus; a transient "dilation and wall thinning" of left ventricle in this patient is suspected to be a sign of diffuse subendocardial ischemia.