Male Sprague-Dawley rats were given a single, usually lethal, dose of 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD, 125 micrograms/kg ip in corn oil), or vehicle alone. Twenty-four hours after ip administration of TCDD the animals received an ip injection of 14C-labeled glucose, and the time course and amount of exhalation of 14CO2 were monitored for 8 h continuously and once daily for 20 min for the subsequent 5 d. TCDD treatment reduced the amount of 14CO2 exhaled within 8 h after the injection of [14C]glucose by 33%, as compared to pair-fed controls. Blood levels of radioactivity were affected by TCDD accordingly. No particular organ appeared to act as a sink for the radioactivity not exhaled during these 8 h by the treated animals. TCDD (125 micrograms/kg) induced significant changes in the disposition of radioactivity in heart and brown adipose tissue between 25 and 125 min after the iv injection of [14C]glucose. The areas under the curve of [14C]glucose-derived radioactivity were the same after either iv or ip injection in the blood of TCDD-treated rats, allowing a direct comparison of experiments with iv or ip injection of [14C]glucose. The half-lives of radioactivity in the exhaled air and in feces of treated animals were greatly elevated during the 5 d following administration of [14C]glucose. These results indicate that TCDD induces in rats, within 24 h after dosing, alterations in the metabolism of glucose that preceded changes in insulin homeostasis, because hypoglycemia and hypoinsulinemia in rats do not occur until about a week after TCDD treatment. Since overt signs of acute toxicity (reduced feed intake and body weight loss) are also not noticeable until several days after a lethal dose of TCDD, it is probable that this earlier disturbance of glucose metabolism is part of the biological changes that result in wasting away and eventually in death.