Sepsis is intricately associated with mesenteric ischemia. The remote complications of mesenteric ischemia are essentially those of sepsis, whether as a cause or as a consequence. Experimental endotoxic shock induces bowel hypoperfusion, erythrocyte extravasation and intestinal necrosis. The effects of pentoxifylline, rolipram and denbufylline, three phosphodiesterase inhibitors, were studied on endotoxin-induced bowel erythrocyte extravasation and intestinal and renal hypoperfusion, in conscious rats and anaesthetized dogs, respectively. Two hours after lipopolysaccharide i.v. injection in rats, erythrocyte extravasation was evident throughout the intestinal musculature and mucosa, apparently without affecting lungs, heart, kidneys, liver or pancreas. Pretreatment with the non-selective phosphodiesterase inhibitor, pentoxifylline, or selective phosphodiesterase IV inhibitors such as denbufylline or rolipram reduced intestinal haemoconcentration. In the anaesthetized dog, pentoxifylline and denbufylline both inhibited the E. coli lipopolysaccharide-induced mesenteric blood flow fall, without affecting renal blood flow or cardiac index. In conclusion, phosphodiesterase inhibitors protected from intestinal damage and bowel hypoperfusion after lipopolysaccharide challenge. This action may thus play a role in the protective effects against endotoxin-induced lethal toxicity previously described for phosphodiesterase inhibitors.