We studied in anesthetized dogs, the effects of cardiopulmonary bypass with normothermic whole blood, crossclamping of the aortic root, and continuous warm blood cardioplegia on the ability of the efferent sympathetic nervous system to augment the heart and that of the efferent parasympathetic nervous system to depress the heart. In control states, heart rate, atrial force of contraction, and right and left ventricular wall systolic pressures were augmented by stimulation of the intrathoracic efferent sympathetic nervous system and by administration of isoproterenol into the systemic circulation. After 1 hour of normothermic cardiopulmonary bypass that utilized aortic crossclamping and continuous perfusion of the coronary arteries with normothermic blood (20 mEq/L potassium), cardiac-augmenting effects induced by the efferent sympathetic nervous system and by isoproterenol were similar. Depressive responses elicited by the efferent parasympathetic nervous system were also unaffected by these procedures. Continuous warm blood cardioplegia does not result in impairment of the efferent sympathetic nervous system regulating the heart.