1 Nifedipine was tested against pressor responses in the pithed rat to ten agonists with varying selectivity for a,-and a2-adrenoceptors, injected as a bolus or infused intravenously: i.e. amidephrine, azepexole, cirazoline, indanidine, M7, methoxamine, noradrenaline (NA), oxymetazoline, phenylephrine and xylazine. Nifedipine, administered before the agonists, inhibited responses initiated by all agonists, usually for both the bolus and infusion responses. 2 With a bolus, blockade was significantly greater against the more prolonged, secondary components of the pressor responses. This demonstrates that calcium-entry occurs during the secondary component of the a-adrenoceptor-mediated response and can be initiated by either a,-or 2-adrenoceptor subtypes.3 The time courses of responses to infusion varied. Selective a,-adrenoceptor agonists, with the exception of indanidine, did not produce a stable pressor response during the 20 min infusion time but M2-adrenoceptor agonists did. Nifedipine reduced responses to infusion with no preference for a,-or a2-agonists. Phenylephrine and NA produced pressor responses which reached a peak and then declined during the remainder of the infusion. 4 The levels ofNA in arterial and venous plasma were measured by h.p.l.c. during the infusion ofNA. Arterial NA levels rose throughout the infusion whereas venous levels remained relatively unaffected. The absolute levels of plasma NA suggest that a large proportion of intravenously administered NA is removed in the pulmonary circulation and the remainder is removed in the systemic circulation with negligible recirculation. 5 The consequences of these results, for assessment of the mechanisms of action of adrenoceptor agonists and calcium entry blockers, are discussed.