In a consecutive series of 143 patients requiring multiple coronary artery bypass grafts, 317 of 441 anastomoses (72%) were constructed from internal thoracic arteries. Of these 143 patients, 103 had bilateral, 51 sequential, and 49 free internal thoracic artery grafts. When compared with an earlier series of 494 patients who underwent only one internal thoracic artery anastomosis, the surgical morbidity and mortality were not increased, but, during 5 years of follow-up, the incidences of postoperative angina and myocardial infarction were found to decrease significantly--32.5% versus 10.5% (p < 0.001) and 5.7% versus 1.4% (p < 0.03), respectively. We conclude that, for patients with multivessel disease, multiple internal thoracic artery grafts confer better protection from the clinical manifestations of ischemic heart disease than does one internal thoracic artery graft. The use of high magnification (8 to 12x, surgical microscope) was essential to the success of this method.