We measured pulmonary clearance of aerosolised 99mtechnetium-labelled diethylenetriaminepentacetate (99mTc-DTPA) in thirty-four patients with acute respiratory dysfunction. Results were expressed as a half-time clearance from lung to blood (T1/2). In sixteen non-smoking patients with acute lung injury, clearance was monoexponential, median T1/2 11, range 4-40 min, and in five multi-exponential, median rapid T1/2 3 min, with a slower median T1/2 of 18 min (range 2-4 and 15-31 min respectively). Clearance was significantly (P less than 0.0001) more rapid than normal non-smoking subjects previously studied (median T1/2 70, range 37-182 min). Three smokers with acute lung injury had T1/2S of 5, 18 and 22 min, not significantly (P greater than 0.05) quicker than normal smokers previously studied (median T1/2 20, range 6-73 min). One smoking lung-injured patient had an abnormal multi-exponential 99mTc-DTPA clearance. Four patients with cardiogenic pulmonary oedema had T1/2S within the normal range. Repeated measurements made on nine patients with acute lung injury showed that clearance remained abnormally rapid despite improvements in lung radiographic appearance and gas exchange. We conclude that the 99mTc-DTPA technique provides a virtually non-invasive measure of alveolar-capillary barrier dysfunction in non-smoking patients with acute lung injury.