Background-Repetitive endomyocardial biopsies are necessary to monitor the effects of immunosuppressants after cardiac transplantation. Contrast ultrasound with microbubble targeting of leukocytes detects acute leukocyte infiltration. We examined whether leukocyte-targeted myocardial contrast echocardiography (MCE) could provide for the quantitative assessment of acute cardiac rejection. Methods and Results-Hearts from Brown Norway rats or Lewis rats were transplanted into other Brown Norway rats. Isografts and groups of allografts either untreated or treated with cyclosporin A (CsA) at a low dose (3 mg · kg) from 3 days before transplantation were compared at posttransplantation day 3. Echocardiography-derived left ventricular wall thickening was comparable among the 4 groups. Myocardial blood flow assessed with MCE, relating pulsing intervals with signal intensity (SI), was slightly decreased only in untreated allografts. However, myocardial SI (in gray levels) obtained after a 10-minute period allowing microbubble-leukocyte interactions after contrast injection exhibited a clear gradient in these groups (12Ϯ2 in untreated allografts, 9Ϯ5 in allografts treated with low-dose CsA, 6Ϯ3 in allografts treated with high-dose CsA, and 2Ϯ1 in isografts, PϽ0.001). The pattern of difference in SI among the groups agreed well with that in ED-1-positive cell (macrophage) count (25Ϯ7, 12Ϯ4, 5Ϯ3, and 1Ϯ0 cells per high-power field, respectively, PϽ0.001), which correlated with CD3-positive cell (T lymphocyte) count (33Ϯ5, 22Ϯ5, 9Ϯ4, and 1Ϯ0 cells per high-power field, respectively, PϽ0.001). Conclusions-Leukocyte-targeted MCE can noninvasively assess the degree of rejection in transplanted hearts by directly revealing the magnitude of intramyocardial infiltration of macrophages and T lymphocytes.