Non-uniform recovery of excitability may be essential in triggering malignant ventricular tachycardia after cardiac surgery. Thirty-five channels ECG was recorded for 6 min in 27 patients before and after heart surgery and in 20 control subjects. Off-line analysis was performed. RR interval duration, RR SD, QT SD and power spectra of RR variability were computed from 256 s stable RR and QT interval series. When compared to controls, patients had decreased RR SD and increased QT SD before surgery (p<0.002 and p<0.0005, respectively); RR SD further decreased and QT SD increased after the surgery (p<0.0001 and p<0.0002, respectively). Increase of QT variability and decrease of RR variability after cardiac surgery may reflect disrupted electrophysiological stability of the myocardium and thus electrophysiological substrate for triggering malignant arrhythmia.