Twenty-five euthyroid patients who underwent cardiac surgery with fentanyl-oxygen anesthesia were studied. The authors confirm that some thyroid hormones undoubtedly take part in a non-specific pool of reactions caused by surgical stress. For one or more days, all the patients had total triiodothyronine (TT3) and free triiodothyronine (FT3) levels clearly below the normal values, with a parallel increase in reverse triiodothyronine (rT3, biologically inactive). Changes in total (TT4) and free thyroxine (FT4), although significant, were smaller and hard to interpret. The most important changes occurred on the first postoperative day. Of seven patients who before the operation had a TT3 value below the lower normal limit, six had at discharge a mean TT3 level significantly above it. Serum TT3 concentrations could be a reliable prognostic index. High-dose fentanyl anesthesia probably does not affect thyroid hormone response to surgical stress. To date, the mechanisms which cause reduction of serum triiodothyronine have not been fully discovered and it is not known for certain whether this reduction is beneficial to the human organism.