Between 1969 and 30th June 1996, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) was definitively diagnosed in 88 Austrian patients by autopsy and/or biopsy. The number of diagnosed cases has steadily increased in recent years (average incidence in 1969-1985: 0.18 per million; 1986-1994: 0.67 per million; 1995: 1.25 per million; estimate for 1996: 1.7 per million). The percentage of patients older than 70 years increased until 1989 and has decreased slightly since then. One patient received a lyophilised dura transplant 11 years before death. Another patient gave a history of intramuscular injections of bovine RNA (Regeneresen) extracted from various organs including brain administered over a ten-year period. One female patient had familial CJD with a glutamate-->lysine mutation at codon 200 of the prion protein (PrP) gene PRNP. The ages at death are distributed symmetrically around the median of 64 years. Two female patients died at the unusually young ages of 27 and 30 years. Median duration of disease was 4.5 months; 77% of the patients died within 6 months after onset of the disease. Retrospectively, 83% of the patients fulfilled the clinical criteria of probable or possible CJD. Neuropathologically, each patient showed accumulation of immunocytochemically detectable pathological PrP in the central nervous system. No patient had the neuropathological profile of the new CJD variant recently described in the U.K. The recent rise in diagnosed CJD in Austria probably reflects increased awareness and recognition rather than a real increase. Since bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) has not been observed in Austria, our data argue against an association between the rise of incidence of CJD and BSE.