We measured serum interleukin-6 (IL-6) and acute-phase proteins, alpha 1-acid glycoprotein (AGP) and alpha 2-macroglobulin (alpha 2M), after a retrograde intrabiliary bacterial infection in rats with biliary obstruction. Maximum serum IL-6 was obtained at 6 h in rats following inoculation of bacteria (10(6) CFU/ml E. Coli) in the bile duct and it was higher than that observed in rats undergoing a bile duct ligation or a laparotomy. There was a strict relationship between the level of IL-6 at 6 h and the modified levels of AGP and alpha 2M at 48 h. AGP and alpha 2M levels were the highest in sera of rats with bile duct infection as compared with those found in sera of rats with bile duct ligation or laparotomy. After inoculation of E. Coli or E. Fecalis, blood IL-6 level was always higher at 6 h in inferior vena cava as compared with that found in the supra hepatic vein. These results indicate that IL-6 is synthesized after a biliary sepsis and that its blood level is higher in the systemic circulation than in the local circulation.