The presence of nitric oxide (NO) in the exhaled air of humans and of anaesthetized rabbits and guinea pigs was demonstrated by chemiluminescence, diazotization and mass spectrometry. This NO is endogenously produced in the lung by an NO synthase, since its generation in guinea pigs and rabbits was inhibited by N omega-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester and NG-monomethyl-L-arginine, inhibitors of this enzyme. The effect of the inhibitors was reversed by the precursor of NO synthesis, L-arginine. Since NO is produced by normal vascular endothelium for the physiological regulation of blood flow and pressure and also by activated macrophages to contribute to non-specific immunity, our experiments suggest that NO may play both vascular regulatory and host defence roles in pulmonary physiology and pathophysiology.