Five normal men received constant intravenous infusions of luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LH-RH), 0.2 µg/min, for 14-19 hours. Serum levels of luteizining hormone (LH) revealed a biphasic pattern of increase, reaching maximal values by 4 hours after the infusions began, then remained near that level until the infusions ceased. Serum follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) levels rose gradually to maximal values by 6-13 hours and maintained this level until the end of the infusions. Testosterone (T) levels revealed gradual increases throughout the infusions. These results confirm an increase in serum T levels with prolonged endogenous gonadotrophin stimulation. This is in contrast to the inability of several previous studies to demonstrate an increase in T levels following the relatively short gonadotrophin elevation produced by single-shot LH-RH administration. The T increases produced, however, were quantitatively much less than those reported during prolonged LH-RH infusions in rams, suggesting that the human testis is less responsive to endogenous gonadotrophin stimulation than is that of the ram. In addition, prolonged LH-RH stimulation did not cause pituitary refractoriness in men as has been described in animals.