A newly developed alpha 2 blocker, midaglizole (DG-5128, 2-[2-(4,5-dihydro-1H-imidazol-2-yl)-1-phenylethyl] pyridine dihydrochloride sesquihydrate) has been shown to have a hypoglycemic action in healthy controls as well as in diabetics. Since human platelets are rich in alpha 2 receptors, the effects of midaglizole on platelet aggregation were investigated. In normal controls, ADP- or epinephrine-induced platelet aggregation was significantly inhibited 2 h after oral administration of 300 mg midaglizole. Midaglizole also suppressed diabetic platelet aggregation stimulated by 10 or 100 microM epinephrine and delayed the initiation of collagen-induced aggregation at 30 micrograms/ml. In vitro addition of midaglizole at 9 or 90 microM significantly inhibited epinephrine-induced platelet aggregation. Furthermore, long-term administration of midaglizole suppressed diabetic platelet aggregation induced by 0.5-1 microM ADP or 1 microM epinephrine. These results suggest that alpha 2 blockade not only blunts diabetic epinephrine-induced platelet aggregation but also affects ADP- or collagen-stimulated platelet aggregation, indicating that this alpha 2 blocker may offer a new approach to the treatment of diabetic microangiopathy.