Alzheimer's disease (AD) includes a group of dementing neurodegenerative disorders that have diverse etiologies but the same hallmark brain lesions. Since oxidative stress may play a role in the pathogenesis of AD and isoprostanes are chemically stable peroxidation products of arachidonic acid, we measured both iPF2alpha-III and iPF2alpha -VI using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry in AD and control brains. The levels of both isoprostanes, but not of 6-keto PGF1alpha, an index of prostaglandin production, were markedly elevated in both frontal and temporal poles of AD brains compared to the corresponding cerebella. Levels were also elevated compared to corresponding areas of brains from patients who had died with schizophrenia or Parkinson's disease or from nonneuropsychiatric disorders. iPF2alpha -IV, but not iPF2alpha-III, levels were higher in ventricular CSF of AD brains relative to the non-AD brains. These data suggest that specific isoprostane analysis may reflect increased oxidative stress in AD.