A patient with refractory diarrhoea (up to 10 l/d) following colectomy and ileostomy was treated with clonidine, after loperamide, tinctura opii, cholestyramine and somatostatin had failed to reduce stool volume to less than 6 l/d. Under combined treatment with clonidine (1200 micrograms/d) and somatostatin (6 mg/d), which was well tolerated, stool weights were normalised within 24 hours. This case report on the successful anti-diarrhoeic effect of clonidine is completed by experimental data from rat jejunal and duodenal segments. In the presence of the adenylate cyclase-stimulating agent forskolin, clonidine normalised both mucosal cAMP content and cAMP-induced hypersecretion in rat intestine. This suggests that the anti-diarrhoeic effect of clonidine in-vitro results from an alpha 2-receptor mediated inhibition of the stimulated adenylate cyclase. Case report and experimental data therefore support the theory that therapeutical application of clonidine in diarrhoea may be successful.