The changes in the excitability of the reorganized axonal membrane in myelinated and demyelinated nerve fibres as well as the causes conditioning such changes have been investigated by paired stimulation during the first 30 ms of the recovery cycle. The variations of the action potential parameters (amplitude and velocity) are traced also. The simulation of the conduction along the normal fiber is based on the Frankenhaeuser and Huxley (1964) and Goldman and Albus (1968) equations, while the demyelination is considered to be an elongation of the nodes of Ranvier. The axonal membrane reorganization is achieved by means of potassium channel blocking and increase of the sodium-channel permeability. It is shown that potassium channels block decreases membrane excitability for the myelinated and demyelinated fibres in the cases of initial and paired stimulation. With increasing sodium-channel permeability on the background of the blocked potassium channels, the membrane excitability is increased. For the fibres with a reorganized membrane, a supernormality of the membrane excitability is obtained, the latter remaining unrecovered during the 30 ms cycle under investigation. The supernormality of the excitability grows from the demyelinated fibre without reorganized membrane to the demyelinated fibre with reorganized one. For short interstimulus intervals, the second action potential propagates along the fibres with a reduced velocity and a decreased amplitude. No supernormality of the potential parameters (amplitude, velocity) is observed during the cycle up to 30 ms.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)