The effect of 30-min tourniquet ischaemia (Bier's block) on the antidromic homolateral left median nerve sensory potential (SP) and on the bilateral sympathetic skin response (SSR) was studied in 6 healthy volunteers. The SSR was provoked both acoustically and by electrical stimulation of the median nerve; the latter stimulus was also used to provoke the SP. After 28 min of tourniquet ischaemia, the electrical stimulus failed to provoke the SP and bilateral SSR, indicating blockade of the afferent limb of the reflex. The acoustic SSR was unaffected by ischaemia, and thus the efferent limb of the SSR was not blocked, indicating that ischaemia does not affect the post-ganglionic efferent C fibres. These findings confirm that 30 min of ischaemia blocks A beta afferent fibres but does not block efferent C fibres. Thus the analgesia following Bier's block alone, in some patients with sympathetically maintained pain, most likely results from the ischaemic blockade of sensory A beta fibres, confirmed both acoustically and by electrical stimulation of the median nerve.