Seventeen hypertensive patients receiving guanethidine for therapy were studied to determine the relationship of guanethidine plasma levels to adrenergic blockade. Plasma levels of guanethidine were measured by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, and adrenergic blockade was defined by determining the venous reflex response to Valsalva maneuver or deep breath. A significant correlation was found between the change in the venous reflex response and the fall in mean standing pressure when guanethidine is given to patients maintained on a sodium restricted diet. A linear relationship was found between dose and plasma guanethidine concentration (p < 0.0001), but there was a 6-fold interindividual variation in the plasma levels resulting from any given dose. Adrenergic blockade occurred when plasma levels were 8 ng/ml or higher. These results indicate that the large individual variation in dose requirements for the hypotensive effects of guanethidine most likely is not due to requirements for greatly different plasma levels of the drug; that the variation must result from pharmacokinetic determinants of differing plasma levels between individuals or from other factors, such as increased plasma volume, which maintain elevated arterial pressure in the face of adrenergic blockade.