Electrical field stimulation (EFS) elicited two types of responses from longitudinal muscle strips of the distal cat ileum: contraction at switching on the stimulation (in 62% of the strips) and inhibition of the phasic contractions at switching on the stimulation followed by contraction in 38% of the strips. In all strips the muscarinic acetylcholine subtype M1-receptor agonist (4-Hydroxy-2-butynyl)-1-trimethylammonium-m-chlorocarbanilate chloride (McN-A-343) increased the tone and amplitude of the spontaneous contractions. On this background EFS elicited an inhibition of the phasic contractions at switching on the stimulation followed by contraction. Blockade of nitric oxide (NO)-synthase by Nw-nitro-L-arginine (L-NNA) transformed the inhibitory response into contraction and this transformation was partly overcome by L-arginine. The results suggest that presynaptically situated M1 receptors are involved in the NO pathway.