To evaluate the determinants of exercise capacity in the hypertensive elderly with an assessment of cardiac reserve by dipyridamole radionuclide angiography, 31 elderly subjects (aged 62 to 78 years, 15 hypertensive and 16 normotensive) underwent symptom-limited maximum treadmill exercise with measurement of maximal oxygen consumption along with radionuclide angiography in list mode at rest and after dipyridamole infusion. In the normotensive elderly, maximal oxygen consumption correlated with relative filling volume during the rapid filling period at rest (r = 0.58; p < 0.05), and correlated inversely with the percent change in the peak ejection rate with dipyridamole (r = -0.63; p < 0.01). In contrast, maximal oxygen consumption correlated with atrial contribution at rest (r = 0.69; p < 0.005), and correlated inversely with the percent change in atrial contribution with dipyridamole (r = -0.87; p < 0.0001) in the hypertensive elderly. These results indicate that the mechanisms for maintaining exercise capacity are different in elderly subjects with or without hypertension.