The effects of intradermal injection of CP-96,345 and Men 10207, selective antagonists for NK-1 and NK-2 tachykinin receptors, respectively, on the extravasation of plasma protein induced by antidromic stimulation of unmyelinated sensory fibers in the sciatic nerve was studied in rat hindpaw. Activation of unmyelinated fibers by antidromic sciatic nerve stimulation (1 Hz, 5 min) consistently evoked a localized plasma extravasation of Evans blue on the skin area of the hindpaw innervated by the sciatic nerve, which was not inhibited by intradermal injection of saline or Men 10207 (9 and 35 nmol). In contrast, CP-96,345 (3 and 9 nmol, but not 1 nmol), injected intradermally 15 min prior to nerve stimulation dose-dependently inhibited this response. Plasma extravasation induced by intravenously injected substance P was also inhibited by CP-96,345. Since CP-96,345 is a highly selective antagonist for NK-1 tachykinin receptors, it is suggested that the plasma extravasation induced by antidromic C-fiber stimulation and by systemically applied tachykinins is mediated by NK-1 tachykinin receptors.