The feasibility and reliability of a short dialysis technique performed with standard dialysis equipment and a modified cuprammonium rayon hollow-fibre filter has been studied. The hydraulic response of the filter and membrane to high blood flows and transmembrane pressures were tested in vitro and the maximal clearances of different solutes achievable during high-flux bicarbonate dialysis were studied in vivo. Clinical studies were undertaken to evaluate the long-term effects of the short, highly efficient dialysis therapy. Six patients were treated for more than a year with single-pass bicarbonate dialysis with a blood flow of 500 ml/min, dialysate flow of 700 ml/min, and average duration of 150 min/session three times weekly. The treatment showed an adequate efficiency with an average KT/V greater than 1. All patients obtained an average blood urea nitrogen during the study of less than 80 mg/dl and an average protein catabolic rate of 0.9 g/kg per 24 h. The treatment was well tolerated by all patients and, on echocardiography, no significant changes in myocardial function were detected after one year of therapy. The treatment is efficient, well tolerated, simple to monitor and does not require the use of synthetic membranes or machines with advanced technology. Thus the reduction of dialysis treatment time is feasible in all centres at a relatively low cost.