To determine whether any associated electrocardiographic findings in persons with newly acquired complete left bundle branch block (LBBB) correlate with the prevalence of associated clinically apparent cardiovascular abnormalities, electrocardiograms (ECGs) from all 55 members of the Framingham Study cohort in whom LBBB developed during 18 years of routine prospective biennial examinations were reviewed. A QRS axis left of or equal to 0 degrees, left atrial conduction delay and an inverted T wave in lead V6 on the first ECG with LBBB, and an abnormal ECG in the Framingham examination preceding the appearance of LBBB each correlated with the prevalence of systemic hypertension, cardiomegaly, coronary heart disease and congestive heart failure. However, neither the PR interval nor the duration of the QRS complex on the first ECG with LBBB correlated with the prevalence of any of the associated cardiovascular abnormalities. The 8 patients with neither left atrial conduction delay nor a QRS axis left of or equal to 0 degrees on the first Framingham ECG with LBBB nor an abnormal ECG on the examination preceding the appearance of LBBB were 6 times more likely to remain free of all of the clinical cardiovascular abnormalities than the 47 patients with 1 or more of these 3 electrocardiographic findings (p less than 0.001).