Introduction: Stress cardiomyopathy (SCMP) is characterized by acute reversible left ventricular (LV) dysfunction, and it is well accepted that SCMP can show various patterns with or without apical involvement. However, clinical data describing characteristics and outcomes according to the patterns of LV ballooning are lacking. Methods: We retrospectively identified 549 consecutive patients (age, 64±15 years; 328 female) with SCMP in a single tertiary hospital from Jan 2009 to June 2014. They were divided into 2 groups with typical apical ballooning (group 1) and atypical patterns sparing the LV apical segment (group 2). Clinical characteristics and outcomes including in-hospital mortality were explored. Results: Apical ballooning was most common (n=394, 71.8%) and group 2 included mid-ventricular ballooning (21.7%), basal ‘inverted’ ballooning (2.9%), global hypokinesia (1.8%), localized ballooning (1.1%), and isolated right ventricular ballooning (0.7%). Group 1 was characterized by higher mean age (67±13 vs. 55±17 years, p<0.001) with higher prevalence of coronary risk factors including obesity, hypertension, hyperlipidemia and diabetes mellitus. Emotional stress was a triggering event in a very limited patients comprising < 5%, whereas physical stress associated with underlying medical conditions comprised more than 70%. Distribution of triggering events was similar between groups. ECG abnormalities including T wave inversion, ST segment elevation, QT prolongation and atrial fibrillation were more frequent in group 1 than group 2 with lower LV ejection fraction. However, in-hospital mortality was comparable between groups (24% vs. 21%, p=0.52). Conclusions: Apical sparing ballooning develops in up to 30% of patients with SCMP. Younger age, favorable medical conditions, less severe ECG changes, and higher LV ejection fraction cannot translate to lower mortality in this group. Physicians’ vigilance is needed to improve clinical outcomes.