We studied the effect of a volume load induced by a 45 degrees Trendelenburg position on atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) secretion in awake and anaesthetized patients with coronary artery disease undergoing aortocoronary bypass surgery. ANP was measured in different parts of the circulation before and after induction of high dose fentanyl anaesthesia at fixed times prior to and after extracorporeal circulation. METHOD. In eight patients with coronary artery disease (NYHA classification II-III), who received neither diuretic nor positive inotropic therapy, ANP was measured in the various parts of the circulation: in a peripheral vein, a radial artery, in the pulmonary artery and in the coronary sinus. The measurements were made in the supine and 45 degrees Trendelenburg position. Measurements of mean arterial pressure (MAP), central venous pressure (RAP), pulmonary arterial pressure (PAP), pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (PCWP), cardiac index (CI) and heart rate (HR) were taken simultaneously. The measurements were taken in the awake patient, during steady-state high-dose fentanyl anaesthesia with 50% O2 in N2O and after extracorporeal circulation. RESULTS. Compared to measurements in a control group, ANP levels were significantly higher in all parts of the circulation in patients with coronary artery disease, although clinical symptoms of heart failure were absent. After extracorporeal circulation, significantly higher levels of ANP were found at all measurement sites; however the concentration gradient of ANP between coronary sinus and arterial or venous blood was reduced. In awake and anaesthetized patients a change in body position, causing a significant increase in filling pressures, did not produce an increase in ANP levels at all measurement sites. The induction of high-dose fentanyl anaesthesia did not have an influence on plasmatic ANP levels. CONCLUSION. The results of this study lead to the following conclusions: 1. ANP levels in patients with CAD are increased, even if clinical heart failure symptoms are absent. 2. ANP is secreted in the coronary vessels. Following dilution in the atrial blood, it is metabolized to inactive compounds in the periphery. 3. Basic ANP levels are not changed by high-dose fentanyl anaesthesia. Marked increases of the filling pressures do not correlate with atrial ANP levels either before or after induction of anaesthesia. 4. After extracorporeal circulation ANP levels are significantly increased in all parts of the circulation. The concentration gradient between coronary sinus blood, on the one hand, and arterial and venous blood on the other hand is reduced. This phenomenon is probably caused by an alteration in the metabolism of ANP during hypothermic extracorporeal circulation.