The effects of timolol (10 mg thrice daily) and hydrochlorothiazide (50 mg/day) have been compared in a double-blind factorial trial in 20 patients with essential hypertension. There were four randomised test phases of 8 weeks each during which patients received timolol alone, hydrochlorothiazide alone, timolol plus hydrochlorothiazide, and no treatment (placebo). Blood-pressure was measured weekly, alternately at the outpatient clinic and at the patient's home. Supine mean arterial pressure fell from 119 mm Hg in the placebo phase to 110 mm Hg in the hydrochlorothiazide phase, 106 mm Hg in the timolol phase, and 101 mm Hg in the combined timolol plus hydrochlorothiazide phase. Factorial analysis revealed that these effects of the two drugs were additive without any potentiation or antagonism. Mean plasma-renin activity (P.R.A.) was 5-02 ng/ml/3 h in the placebo phase falling to 1-79 in the timolol phase and rising to 9-54 in the diuretic phase, but remaining unchanged in the combined treatment phase (5-40 ng/ml/3 h). The data suggest that the hypotensive action of timolol is not dependent on the concomitant fall in P.R.A. The methods described provide a valuable tool for quantitating the effects of a given drug, and hence a valid basis for objective comparison.