An increase in the capillary permeability to albumin (CPA) has been reported in diabetic patients. We observed this frequently with a non-invasive isotopic test derived from the Landis method, using 99mTc-albumin and measuring residual radioactivity externally after removal of forearm venous compression. Evidence of the independent effects of hypertension and microangiopathy on CPA has already been found. The present work was designed to investigate CPA using the same test on diabetic patients without retinopathy and clinical proteinuria. Some of these patients had objective clinical distal and symmetrical polyneuropathy. Neuropathy was clearly present in 10 of the 11 patients with an abnormal test unexplained by causes other than diabetes and in only one of the 17 patients with a normal test. The most frequent abnormality affected the late radioactivity disappearance curve, which probably reflects an impaired lymphatic wash-out of interstitial albumin. These results strongly suggest a link between peripheral neuropathy and diabetic functional microangiopathy. An elevated blood flow secondary to sympathetic nerve failure may induce an increase in CPA and a saturation of lymphatic pumping which could also be deficient due to impaired lymphatic innervation.