As a part of presurgical evaluation, bilateral intracarotid amobarbital procedures (IAPs) were performed in 42 patients (84 tests) with long-standing, medically intractable complex-partial seizures. During the IAPs, electrocorticographic (ECoG) recording was carried out via bilaterally implanted subdural electrodes. Five distinct patterns of suppression of electrical brain activity were observed: (1) an isoelectric line; (2) a burst-suppression pattern; (3) polyphasic waves; (4) high-voltage beta; and (5) low-voltage beta activity. Further, two types of specific reactions of the epileptic focus were detectable: (1) spike-burst-suppression patterns (SBS; 11 left; 7 right; 6 in both IAPs) and amobarbital-induced spikes (7 left; 4 right). ECoG suppression patterns as well as SBS and spike induction showed great variability in duration and overall occurrence. To determine the influence of these amobarbital-induced ECoG changes on results of IAP memory testing, performance in a verbal learning task was analyzed according to the ECoG patterns predominant during encoding. In left IAPs, it was found that SBS at the beginning of or during encoding had a significant negative effect on verbal memory. In right IAPs, verbal memory performance improved significantly with the decline of ECoG suppression. Hence, verbal memory performance in IAPs is significantly affected by specific ECoG suppression patterns and activation of the epileptic focus.