Fifteen patients with ventricular aneurysm were selected based on the following 3 criteria: 1) electrocardiographic evidence of old myocardial infarction, 2) presence of abnormal precordial impulse, 3) presence of dyskinesis or akinesis with diastolic bulging of the ventricular cavity by angiocardiogram. Eight patients had anterior left ventricular aneurysm and 7 apical aneurysm. The characteristic abnormal precordial impulse was diminished or absent A wave, pre-upstroke retraction, late systolic bulge, and diminished rapid filling wave, all of which were recorded over the restricted area of the broad precordial impulse. M-mode echocardiogram revealed increased or normal excursion of the posterior left ventricular wall. However, abnormal motion of the anterior left ventricular wall was detected in all, if the transducer was located over the abnormal precordial impulse or slightly inside of it. Compound M-mode echocardiographic scan toward the abnormal precordial impulse was able to detect asynergy of the anterior left ventricular wall and the apex, and distinguish it from motions of the interventricular septum and the anterior right ventricular wall. Abnormal motion of the anterior left ventricular wall was paradoxical in 13 patients and flat in the others. Systolic posterior mortion of the posterior left ventricular wall was detected in 2 patients with apical aneurysm. Cardiac ultrasonogram scanning over the abnormal precordial impulse demonstrated the bulging of the ventricular cavity in either systole or diastole depending on the site of lesion. There was a good correlation between cardiac ultrasonography and angiocardiography with respect to the site of lesion. Our study indicates that this method is useful in the diagnosis of anterior and apical aneurysm which ordinary technique failed to detect.