The functional changes in the rat kidney 24 h after administration of 2-bromoethanamine hydrobromide (BEA) have been extensively described. There is, however, little information regarding earlier alterations. The present study was designed to measure early changes in renal function in order to clarify further pathomechanisms of the BEA-induced lesion. Experiments were performed in two groups of Wistar rats with different infusion rates during the first 3 h following injection of 100 mg/kg BW BEA compared to sham-injected rats. Analysis included measuring urine flow, osmolality, urea, sodium and potassium as well as inulin and para-aminohippuric acid clearance. Our studies show a tubular as well as a glomerular involvement in BEA-induced nephropathy. A significantly higher urine flow occurred already in the first 30 min following injection of BEA. Urine osmolality began to decrease after 90 min, Na excretion was elevated at 3 h, K excretion was not significantly different from the control group, urea excretion was increased after 30 min. Contrary to other studies we found a continuously decreasing glomerular filtration rate and PAH clearance during the first 3 h. Our results suggest an early effect of BEA on tubular function (increasing sodium excretion), papillary concentration capacity (increasing urine flow combined with decreasing osmolality) and glomerular function (decreasing glomerular filtration rate).