Glucose absorption and net small intestinal water movement were examined in rats infected with Nippostrongylus brasiliensis at Days 4, 6, 9, 13, and 19 after inoculation. Rats were infected with 4 X 10(3) N. brasiliensis third stage larvae. The entire small intestine was divided into three segments and each segment perfused simultaneously in vivo with Krebs-Ringer phosphate buffer containing 80 mM glucose, 6 X 10(5) dpm/ml [3H]glucose, and 6.2 X 10(3) dpm/ml [14C]polyethylene glycol. Rats perfused on Days 6, 9, 13, and 19 after inoculation showed a significant (P less than 0.05) decrease in glucose absorption rates from all three segments of the small intestine when compared to uninfected controls. In the three segments of uninfected rat small intestine and those perfused on Days 4, 13, and 19 after inoculation, net absorption of water occurred. However, in the proximal and distal segments perfused on Day 6 and the proximal segment perfused on Day 9, net water movement into the lumen occurred. This is the first report of depressed glucose absorption along the entire length of the small intestine during nippostrongylosis and contradicts previous reports of unaltered net glucose absorption in response to this parasite.