This study evaluated the effects of medroxalol on prolactin secretion. Twelve normal subjects received medroxalol, 1 mg/kg, intravenously and on a separate occasion, 5% dextrose in water. Integrated prolactin secretion during the 3 hours after medroxalol injection was significantly increased as compared with dextrose (P less than 0.001). Intravenous administration of medroxalol, 2 mg/kg, to 10 hypertensive subjects resulted in significant elevation of mean prolactin levels above basal levels at all time intervals measured from 30 to 240 minutes after injection. Oral medroxalol administration to 11 hypertensive subjects for up to 15 months did not alter mean prolactin levels. Medroxalol neither stimulated prolactin release nor decreased dopamine suppression of prolactin release from pituitary cell cultures. In conclusion, intravenous medroxalol stimulates prolactin secretion in both normal and hypertensive subjects. This effect is not likely mediated by a direct action of the drug on the pituitary but rather by an effect either within the central nervous system or of a drug metabolite.