This open, non comparative study was designed to establish a suitable dose regime for propofol when used as the main anaesthetic agent and given as a continuous infusion. Thirty patients (ASA I and II) were studied; five received muscle relaxants and were excluded from the analysis of maintenance and recovery. Immediately after an i.v. bolus dose of fentanyl (2 micrograms X kg-1), anaesthesia was induced in all patients with a mean dose of 2.03 mg X kg-1 propofol. Apnoea at induction was seen in 14 patients, with a mean duration of 151 s (range: 20 to 360 s). Mean, systolic and diastolic arterial pressures and heart rate decreased slightly but statistically significantly following induction. Fourteen patients, four of whom received propofol into a vein of the hand, noted pain on the injection site without venous sequelae immediately nor 24 h after anaesthesia. The mean duration of anaesthesia from induction to the patient ability to obey a simple command was approximately 40 min (range: 10 to 95 min). The mean infusion rate of propofol during maintenance was 0.86 +/- 0.04 mg X kg-1 X min-1. During maintenance, a satisfactory depth of anaesthesia was achieved in 23 patients without any further bolus injection of propofol. The mean time from stopping the infusion to eye opening on verbal command was 6.2 min, whilst that for orientation was 8.4 min. The anaesthesist assessed the quality of recovery as good or adequate in all the patients, who all were satisfied by the anaesthesia. No major adverse reactions occurred during or after anaesthesia and the incidence of minor side-effects was low.