According to the results of our research glucocorticoids produced in response to stress ulcerogenic stimuli are gastroprotective factors. The aim of this review article is to demonstrate, through the analysis of data obtained in our studies, that the inhibition of glucocorticoid synthesis by metyrapone can be an adequate and valuable approach for studying the contribution of glucocorticoids, produced during acute activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical (HPA) axis, to gastroprotection in rats. When studying the contribution of glucocorticoids produced in response to moderate, normally non-ulcerogenic stressors or to the administration of the corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) to gastroprotection, it was shown that the suppression of these hormones by metyrapone leads to: 1) the transformation of normally non-ulcerogenic stimuli into ulcerogenic ones; 2) the elimination of the gastroprotective effect of stress preconditioning; 3) the elimination of the gastroprotective effect of CRF. The effects of metyrapone were reproduced under conditions of suppressed glucocorticoid production using the selective CRF-1 receptor antagonist NBI 27914 and the blockade of glucocorticoid receptors with their antagonist RU38486. The data presented suggest that: a) glucocorticoids produced in response to moderate stress stimuli contribute to the protection of the gastric mucosa under these conditions and increase its resistance to subsequent ulcerogenic stimuli (i.e., they contribute to the gastroprotective effect of stress preconditioning); b) glucocorticoids produced in response to CRF administration participate in the realization of its gastroprotective action. The data obtained confirm that the activation of the HPA axis is a gastroprotective component of stress response, and stress-produced glucocorticoids are important gastroprotective factors.