Disruption of an atherosclerotic plaque in coronary arteries with a minor stenosis Is the usual stimulus for acute coronary thrombosis and myocardial infarction. In this article the pathogenesis of arterial thrombosis and contributions of local arterial wall substrates, the theology of blood flow, systemic factors, and the critical role of thrombin in the formation of thrombus are discussed. More potent antithrombotic therapy may accelerate exogenous thrombolysis, allows endogenous thrombolysis, and should reduce recurrent infarction and ischemia and death, as well as need for coronary revascularization. Maximal antithrombotic therapy for acute myocardial infarction includes an Intravenous bolus of heparin at 100 U/kg followed by an intravenous infusion-at 1,200 U/hr for patients weighing 60-80 kg, 1,300 U/hr for those weighing >80 kg, and 1,000 U/hr for those weighing <60 kg (or 1;1 U/kg/hr)-to maintain the activated partial thromboplastin time at 2-3 times control (60-90 sec) for at least 5-7 days. To convert intravenous to subcutaneous administration, use 14,000-17,000 U every 12 hours and Initially overlap the intravenous infusion by 2 hours. The loading dose of aspirin on admission to the hospital is 160 mg followed by 80 mg/day. High risk patients should be considered for conversion of heparin to warfarin therapy for at least 3 months at an international normalized ratio of 2.5-4.0 for the prevention of recurrent ischemia, reinfarction, death, thromboembolism, reactivation of thrombosis, and reduced necessity for revascularization.