The distribution and composition of lipoproteins spanning the very low density and low density lipoprotein spectra have been analysed in ten poorly-controlled, male, Type 2 (non-insulin-dependent), diabetic patients pre-disposed to mild, secondary hypertriglyceridaemia. As compared to age-matched control subjects, the diabetic patients displayed grossly modified, distinctly atherogenic lipoprotein profiles. Modifications were not limited to the very low density lipoprotein profile, as would be expected from the pre-treatment hypertriglyceridaemia. There was also an aberrant low density lipoprotein profile, which was not evident from plasma cholesterol measurements, especially as the diabetic patients at entry were well matched to control subjects with respect to plasma levels of this lipid. Compositional abnormalities were also observed in the poorly-controlled diabetic group, although these were less marked than the distributional changes. There were substantial improvements of the abnormalities detailed above, even over a short treatment period (two weeks), with therapy designed primarily to ameliorate metabolic control. The data suggest that, in the presence of poor metabolic control and hypertriglyceridaemia, occult, atherogenic modifications of low density lipoproteins can occur. The results argue in favour of strict control of triglyceride levels even in diabetic patients with apparently acceptable cholesterol levels.