Recent investigations have demonstrated that the piperazinyl-indole DPI 201-106 (DPI) acts to increase contractility independent of increases in cAMP or inhibition of Na+, K(+)-ATPase. Since associated changes in the capacitance vasculature would also be expected to influence ventricular performance, the influence of DPI on total intravascular volume (IV) was examined. In eight anesthetized dogs undergoing prior sinoaortic baroreceptor denervation and bilateral cervical vagotomy, blood from the venae cavae was drained to an extracorporeal reservoir and returned to the right atrium at a constant rate so that changes in IV could be recorded as reciprocal changes in reservoir volume. Racemic DPI at 50 micrograms/kg/min for 20 min was associated with a 65 +/- 7 ml (P less than 0.0001) decrease in total IV and a decrease in mean arterial pressure from 80 +/- 7 to 74 +/- 5 mmHg (P less than 0.0001). DPI administration was associated with a 67 +/- 9 ml (P less than 0.05) decrease in IV after beta adrenergic blockade and a 68 +/- 11 ml (P less than 0.05) decrease in IV after alpha and beta adrenergic blockade. Abdominal evisceration abolished the IV decrement due to DPI. Radionuclide imaging studies demonstrated that decreases in hepatic and splenic IV contributed to the decrease in splanchnic IV. Thus, DPI acts to decrease total IV. The IV decrement is due entirely to a decrease in splanchnic IV and is not mediated by baroreceptor stimulation or by adrenergic receptor stimulation. In the animal with an intact circulation, the total IV decrement would be expected to increase venous return and thereby act to maintain ventricular end diastolic pressure.