20 patients (6 females, 14 males) aged between 47 and and 75 years (mean: 62.6 yrs.) with acute myocardial infarction (onset of symptoms within 6 hours) were treated intravenously with either 200,000 U urokinase (UK) and 4.5 million U pro-urokinase (pro-UK) within 60 min (group I, N = 10), or 2.5 million U UK within 5 min (group II, N = 10). Blood samples for haemostatic and fibrinolytic function tests were taken prior to and repeatedly during the 24 hours following treatment. Peak fibrinolytic activity measured by fibrin plates was equivalent in both regimens. Average decreases, with lowest levels within 60 to 120 min following thrombolytic therapy, were observed of 27% and 70% for plasminogen, of 71% and 91% for alpha-2-antiplasmin, and of 20% and 74% for fibrinogen in group I and II, respectively. The reptilase time reached maximum values of 1.5- and 4.5-fold within 60 to 180 min. Peak levels of D-dimers and thrombin-antithrombin III complexes in group II were 2.6 and 3.2 times those of group I. After 24 hours, in contrast to group I, all these parameters still remained significantly different from pretreatment values in group II. These data indicate that, contrary to high-dose UK, pro-UK in combination with low-dose UK causes minor systemic fibrinolytic effects and is, therefore, assumed to be largely clot-specific, although the fibrinolytic potential is equivalent for both regimens.