OBJECTIVE To determine the effect that revascularising chronic critically ischaemic legs has no neutrophil activation and adhesion. METHODS Prospective clinical study. METHODS University Hospital. METHODS Twenty-five patients, 16 men and nine women undergoing femorodistal surgery. METHODS Venous blood assays for neutrophils expression of CD11b, neutrophil adhesion, and the plasma concentration of the shed endothelial adhesion receptor, soluble intracellular adhesion molecule 1 (sICAM-1). Urinary microalbuminaemia was measured and expressed as an albumin/creatinine ratio (ACR), as a marker of vascular permeability and plasma neutrophil elastase as evidence of neutrophil activation. Venous blood was taken preoperatively, during surgery and for the first 7 days postoperatively. RESULTS Neutrophil CD11b expression fell following reperfusion of the limb (21.4 mcf to 9.7 mcf, p < 0.02 Mann Whitney U-test) as did neutrophil adhesion (preop. 75% adhesion, postop. 28% p < 0.01). However, the plasma elastase levels rose from 95 micrograms/l to 345 micrograms/l at 4 h and the ACR increased from 5.3 mg/ml to 304.2 mg/ml. The concentration of sICAM-1 fell following reperfusion (p < 0.04). CONCLUSIONS The change in CD11b, sICAM-1 and adhesion may represent a normal immunological response to ischaemia/reperfusion.