Spontaneous coronary artery spasm is an important cause of morbidity both in patients with atherosclerotic coronary artery disease and in those with Prinzmetal's angina. Coronary vasospasm tends to occur in focal areas in the coronary tree and can be readily induced by the use of various agents. Spontaneous severe multivessel spasm, mimicking severe obstructive coronary artery disease, has been infrequently described. The therapeutic dilemma in such a clinical situation is highlighted in our current case where an unnecessary coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG) was performed due to the lack of clinical suspicion of spasm. This patient presented 5 years after triple-vessel CABG with an episode of rest angina, and was initially found to have severe obstruction of all three native coronary arteries with patent grafts to the right coronary and left anterior descending arteries. After nitroglycerin injection, all three native vessels appeared large and normal. This report raises the question of whether the routine use of intracoronary nitroglycerin, largely abandoned over the past 20 years, should be revisited, at least for certain patient populations such as those with rest angina.