Exposure to mercuric compounds at high dose levels has previously been shown to alter the integrity and function of the blood-brain barrier in laboratory animals. In the present study, we have investigated the distribution of intravenously administered inorganic 203Hg in rabbits additionally exposed to MeHg. A single dose of 203HgCl2 was administered together with or 5 min. or 24 hr after administration of a single dose (10 or 37.5 mumol/kg b.wt.) of MeHg. In another experiment, 203HgCl2 was administered to rabbits subchronically exposed to MeHg (1 mumol/kg b.wt. daily for three weeks) 24 hr after cessation of treatment. The integrity of the blood-brain barrier was assayed by measuring the uptake of 203Hg in the brain, as the blood-brain barrier usually serves to exclude inorganic Hg from the brain. The concentration of 203Hg within the brain was similar in all MeHg-treated rabbits, corresponding to 0.02% of the administered dose, and not different from that of control animals. Under these conditions, no obvious damage to the blood-brain barrier by MeHg could be observed.