A 37-year-old female who suffered from SLE had a bleeding disorder. At the time of initial evaluation, the main disease demonstrated was a delta-storage pool deficiency. After this improved, a marked decrease of aggregation still remained, when induced by either ADP, epinephrine, collagen, A23187, thrombin, or PAF-acether. Although arachidonate-induced aggregation was slightly decreased, thromboxane B2 was produced normally in response to exogenous arachidonate. The patient's endoperoxides and/or thromboxane A2 aggregated aspirin-treated platelets, though her platelets were themselves unresponsive. Impaired aggregability induced by TPA (12-0-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate) or OAG (1-oleoyl-2-acetyl-glycerol) was also found. However, the phosphorylation of P43 and P20 induced by several stimulators including CA++ ionophore was normal, using 32P-labelled platelets. It is suggested that TPA or OAG-induced platelet aggregation requires not only the phosphorylation of those proteins, but also another unknown mechanism after the phosphorylation, and that the platelet dysfunction of this patient was due to a defect of some mechanism involving Ca++ uptake or mobilization of cytoplasmic Ca++ from intracellular storage sites.