The effects of propranolol and diltiazem on left ventricular systolic and diastolic function in hypertensive subjects (DBP 90-114 mmHg) were examined with M-mode and 2D echocardiograms in 21 patients in a double-blind fashion prior to and after 4 months of treatment. Systolic function was assessed by measurement of fractional shortening, mean velocity of fibre shortening, peak systolic pressure/end systolic dimension ratio, and end systolic stress/end systolic dimension ratio. To assess diastolic function, maximal rate of change in left ventricular dimension (MAXD), maximal rate of change in posterior wall thinning (MAX PWT) and early diastolic (EDD) and late diastolic dimension changes (LDD) were calculated using digitised M-mode images of mid-wall diameter. Both propranolol and diltiazem reduced systolic and diastolic pressures similarly. No significant changes were observed in any of the parameters of systolic function with either drug. Similarly neither propranolol nor diltiazem altered MAXD or EDD significantly. Although changes in maximal rate of posterior wall thinning (MAX PWT) were not significant with either drug, diltiazem improved MAX PWT in 7 of 8 patients. The results of the study demonstrate that both propranolol and diltiazem reduce blood pressure without significant deleterious effects on systolic or diastolic function. Diastolic functional parameters, which were not abnormal at baseline, showed no consistent change with either propranolol or diltiazem.