A 2-year-old girl presenting with features of both Bartter's syndrome and renal tubular acidosis was investigated. Hypokalemia, increased plasma renin activity in the absence of hypertension, insensitivity to the pressor effects of angiotensin and a histological picture of juxtaglomerular hyperplasia were characteristic of Bartter's syndrome, but an unusual finding was the presence of metabolic acidosis instead of alkalosis. Functional studies revealed a proximal tubular defect in sodium and bicarbonate reabsorption and a distal defect in sodium reabsorption, urinary acidification and concentrating mechanism. Indomethacin administration was followed by an excellent clinical response and improvement of most functional abnormalities. The defect in distal sodium reabsorption was, however, not corrected by prostaglandin inhibition, and could represent the primary event leading to potassium wasting and secondary hypersecretion of prostaglandins.