Non-invasive measurements of right and left ventricular ejection fraction (RVEF, LVEF) by multiple-gated equilibrium radionuclide ventriculography were performed in 18 control subjects, 16 patients with angina pectoris, and 45 patients with hypoxic chronic bronchitis and emphysema. The mean RVEF in the control subjects was 0.62 + 0 09 (SD), which was not significantly different from the mean RVEF in the patients with angina (0.60 + 0.09), but was significantly higher (p < 0.01) than the mean value in patients with chronic bronchitis and emphysema (0.45 + 0. 11). LVEF was not significantly different in the groups studied. There was a significant correlation between LVEF and RVEF only in patients with chronic bronchitis and emphysema (p < 0.001). Those patients with chronic bronchitis and emphysema who had clinical evidence of cor pulmonale at the time of the study had significantly lower values of RVEF and LVEF (p < 0.001) than patients with no previous cor pulmonale or those who had had cor pulmonale in the past. There was a significant correlation between RVEF and arterial oxygen (p < 0.01) and carbon dioxide tensions (p < 0.05). Reduced RVEF in patients with chronic bronchitis and emphysema may be an early indicator of the development of cor pulmonale and may be useful as a non-invasive method of assessing the effects of therapeutic interventions.Right ventricular hypertrophy, with pulmonary hypertension, is a characteristic feature of the "blue and bloated" (type B, non-fighter) pattern seen in some patients with chronic bronchitis and emphysema.'-' Although the association between arterial hypoxaemia and pulmonary vasoconstriction is well known,5 the mechanism of development of cor pulmonale in these patients is unclear. Cor pulmonale is recognised clinically in patients with chronic bronchitis and emphysema by the presence of peripheral oedema for which no other cause can be found, and it is a poor prognostic sign, only onethird of such patients surviving for five years.4'6 The basis of the oedema in cor pulmonale remains in doubt.7 There is also debate about whether right heart function in such patients is normal or depre-