To investigate the effect of cyclooxygenase inhibition in experimental Gram-negative sepsis, indomethacin was administered to mice at different times (1 or 5 days, or 1 h) before sublethal infection with an intravenous inoculum of Pseudomonas aeruginosa Early indomethacin exposure did not alter the outcome of infection, yet treatment at the time of bacterial challenge resulted in a high mortality rate. Polymerase chain reaction-assisted mRNA amplification in the spleens of infected mice revealed that tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) messenger was selectively expressed by the drug-treated and infected mice during the 24 h preceding death. Higher TNF-alpha levels were found in sera from these mice, whose macrophages produced increased levels of nitric oxide in vitro. Both pentoxifylline, an inhibitor of TNF-alpha synthesis, and an inhibitor of nitric oxide production improved survival in the indomethacin-treated and infected mice, although no such effect followed the administration of TNF-neutralizing antibodies. These data support the notion that cyclooxygenase inhibitors may exert both positive and negative effects in Gram-negative sepsis, the latter presumably involving overproduction of TNF-alpha.