Patients with pyelonephritic renal scarring are at risk of developing renal failure and hypertension. We studied glomerular filtration rate (GFR), renal plasma flow (RPF), filtration fraction (FF), systolic (SBP) and diastolic (DBP) blood pressure, fractional sodium, potassium and phosphate excretion, peripheral renin activity (PRA), plasma aldosterone (p-Aldo), urinary albumin excretion (U-Alb) and urinary beta 2-microglobulin excretion (beta 2-M) in hydropenia and during transition to 3% volume expansion with isotonic saline infusion in 22 female patients with renal scarring due to pyelonephritis and 9 healthy controls. The patients had significantly lower GFR, higher SBP and higher PRA in hydropenia, but there was no significant difference in RPF, FF, DBP or p-Aldo. After volume expansion, SBP, DBP, PRA and p-Aldo were significantly higher in patients than in controls. Transition to 3% volume expansion was associated with a similar increase in SBP in both patients and controls, whereas DBP increased significantly more in the patients (p less than 0.01). Volume expansion resulted in a significant suppression of PRA and p-Aldo in both patients and controls. The patients with renal scarring had the same capacity to excrete sodium and water during transition to volume expansion as the healthy controls. The renin-aldosterone system seems abnormally activated and is probably more important than hypervolemia in the development of hypertension in this group of patients.