The present study was designed to evaluate somatostatin as a hormonal inhibitor of gastric functions in humans. Seven healthy volunteers were investigated on 6 separate days. Peptone meal-stimulated gastric acid secretion was measured by intragastric titration for 2 h and gastric emptying was estimated with a dye-dilution technique. The effect of intravenous administration of somatostatin at 0, 12.5, 50, 100, and 200 pmol/kg.h was investigated and related to the effect of intragastric administration of 100 ml of vegetable oil. Plasma somatostatinlike immunoreactivity was elevated during intravenous administration of somatostatin at 100 and 200 pmol/kg.h, whereas no increase was detected in response to the oil. Somatostatin infusion at 100 and 200 pmol/kg.h significantly inhibited the acid secretion by 25% and 65%, and the oil reduced the acid output by 41%. Somatostatin at 100 and 200 pmol/kg.h significantly enhanced gastric emptying, whereas the oil inhibited gastric emptying. These observations suggest that somatostatin may not be an important hormonal messenger of fat-induced inhibition of acid secretion or gastric emptying.