To determine whether clinical manifestations in patients with mitral valve prolapse (MVP) are associated with altered sympatho-vagal tone, 46 patients (mean age 27 +/- 6, range 20-45 years; 18 males and 28 females) were studied by power spectrum analysis of RR variability. Patients were divided in 2 groups, according to echocardiographic criteria: Group A: 11 patients with classical MVP; Group B: 35 patients with non classical MVP. These patients were compared with 30 healthy subjects (Group C) well matched for age, body surface area and heart rate. Our findings indicate that at rest there is a significant difference in the high-frequency component between Group A and Group C. Similarly, during the increase in sympathetic activity induced by 70 degrees head-up tilt all groups showed an increase in the low-frequency component, that was more evident in Group A. The data generated from our laboratory suggest that mitral regurgitation (Group A) is a probable cause of vagal tone increase and that there is an adaptive long-term mechanism towards sympathetic conditions. In addition, probably the normalization, demonstrable by the effect of sympathetic activity in tilt, can mask a dysfunction that may be differently evoked.