Cisapride, a relatively new gastrointestinal prokinetic agent, has been reported to increase gastric emptying and improve symptoms of gastroparesis. We investigated these effects of cisapride in patients with severe idiopathic and diabetic gastroparesis during an eight-week trial. The study design was a two-week single-blind placebo run in period to exclude placebo responders, followed by a six-week randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled treatment phase. Delayed gastric emptying of solids on radionuclide scan and a minimum symptom intensity score were inclusion criteria. Forty-three patients were entered: four placebo responders and one other patient were excluded, leaving 19 patients randomized to cisapride (20 mg per os three times a day before meals), and 19 patients to placebo. Seven individual symptoms of gastroparesis were scored in a daily diary and reviewed at two-week visits. Sixteen patients in the cisapride group were able to complete the trial compared to 12 on placebo. The gastric emptying study was repeated at the end of treatment or at the time of withdrawal for those who dropped out. Cisapride significantly increased solid gastric emptying relative to baseline (P = 0.005) whereas placebo did not (P > 0.10). Cisapride did not significantly improve any symptom of gastroparesis relative to baseline or to placebo. We conclude that in a population of severe, refractory gastroparetic patients cisapride significantly accelerates gastric emptying of a solid meal without significantly reducing symptoms during a short-term treatment trial compared to placebo. Further trials of cisapride in less advanced and "end-stage" gastroparetics than studied here or combining cisapride with other prokinetic agents or antiemetics, are warranted.