Transient imaging has been introduced to enhance the signal intensities when using echo contrast agents. However, this phenomenon is not clearly understood. To evaluate the mechanisms of this phenomenon, isolated pig hearts were investigated with different echo imaging techniques in the beating, working heart as well as in an asystolic state without any motion of the heart. The hearts of five German farm pigs (21 +/- 2.5 kg) were surgically explanted and inserted in an artificial circulation providing physiological flow and pressures. Levovist in the dosage of 0.05-0.3 g was injected into the left atrium and contrast effects evaluated in the left ventricular (LV) cavity and in the myocardium with an ultrasound imager (ATL, HDI 3000) equipped with a prototype software for harmonic imaging. Harmonic B-scans and power Doppler registrations were performed with continuous and intermittent recordings (ECG triggered at end-systole) in the beating heart and using an external trigger in the asystolic heart in which perfusion was interrupted for 20 seconds. In the beating pig heart, transient harmonic power Doppler imaging provided intensive opacification of the LV cavity and visible myocardial uptake when ECG triggering was performed. In the asystolic pig heart, with uninterrupted perfusion, both triggered and nontriggered registrations showed contrast signals in the LV cavity and in the myocardium. These findings cannot be explained with the known physics of ultrasound contrast media. Stimulated acoustic emission occurring during disintegration of the microbubbles in the acoustic field would explain this phenomenon, which has not yet been described for Levovist.