A patient with renal acidosis developed unanticipated toxicity after ordinary doses of pseudoephedrine, prompting us to study renal determinants of its elimination. We presumed that our patient accumulated the drug because of her persistently alkaline urine, which would favor tubular resorption of this weak base (pKa = 9.4). We studied normal adults and children and one adult and one child with renal tubular acidosis. Increasing urine pH increased the serum elimination half-life from 1.9 to 21 hr. While urinary pH remained alkaline, renal excretion of pseudoephedrine and its metabolite, norpseudoephedrine, was directly correlated with the flow rate of urine in each subject. Both urine pH and flow are important determinants of the elimination of pseudoephedrine in man and could be critical determinants of unanticipated toxicity.