The records of 2,584 consecutive patients who underwent both treadmill exercise testing and coronary cineangiography were reviewed to determine the relation between exercise-induced, acceleration-dependent left bundle branch block (LBBB) and the presence of coronary artery disease (CAD). Rate-dependent LBBB during exercise was identified in 28 patients (1.1%), who were categorized according to their presenting symptoms: classic angina pectoris, atypical chest pain, symptomatic cardiac arrhythmia and asymptomatic. Asymptomatic patients underwent a screening exercise test. CAD was present in 7 of 10 patients who presented with classic angina pectoris, but 12 of 13 patients presenting with atypical chest pain had normal coronary arteries. All 10 patients in whom LBBB developed at a heart rate of 125 beats/min or higher were free of CAD, whereas 9 of 18 patients in whom LBBB developed at a heart rate of less than 125 beats/min had CAD. Normal coronary arteries were present in 3 patients who presented with angina and in whom both chest pain and LBBB developed during exercise. It is concluded that patients who present with atypical chest pain in whom rate-dependent LBBB develops on the treadmill are significantly less likely to have CAD than patients who present with classic angina; the onset of LBBB at a heart rate of 125 beats/min or higher is highly correlated with the presence of normal coronary arteries, regardless of patient presentation; and patients with angina in whom both chest pain and LBBB develop during exercise may have normal coronary arteries.