Rabbits were fed diets enriched with cholestanol or cholesterol (3.5 g/wk) for 4-12 weeks. During cholestanol feeding, the concentration of cholestanol in blood serum, liver, heart and aorta increased 15-30 times. In serum and liver, the concentration of cholesterol also increased. Cholestanol-fed rabbits developed inflammatory changes in the liver, with proliferation of small bile ducts. Liver tests were only slightly abnormal. Morphological atherosclerosis of the aorta was only occasionally seen in rabbits receiving cholestanol for eight weeks or less. During cholesterol feeding, the amounts of cholesterol in different tissues increased dramatically, most in the aorta. Morphological atherosclerosis in the aorta was found in all rabbits fed cholesterol-enriched diets for more than four weeks. Brain cholestanol was doubled in rabbits fed cholestanol for eight weeks, whereas brain sterols did not change significantly during cholesterol feeding. After an additional regression period with cholestyramine for eight weeks, the increased content of cholestanol in the brain was unchanged in cholestanol-fed rabbits. These observations are discussed in relation to the cholestanolosis of the brain that develops in the rare inherited human disease cerebrotendinous xanthomatosis.