The inhibitory effect of A-primary afferent activity on A- and C-evoked activity in dorsal horn convergent neurones has been investigated in the decerebrate spinal rat. A-afferent conditioning stimuli produce a powerful inhibition of the C-evoked activity in the majority of units recorded in lamina 5 but were almost without effect on the C-evoked activity in units recorded within the substantia gelatinosa (laminae 1 and 2). The ability of an A-volley to inhibit the response to a C-volley begins immediately after the arrival of the A-volley and lasts for 50-70 ms. Conditioning A-stimuli also inhibit the A-evoked activity of dorsal horn neurones, the inhibition lasting up to 125 ms. Unlike the effect of A-conditioning stimuli on C-responses, which was restricted to units in lamina 5, the A-volleys inhibited the response of both substantia gelatinosa and lamina 5 units. In rats with chronically sectioned sciatic nerves (7-14 days) both A on A and A on C inhibitions were significantly diminished in spite of intact afferent volleys and postsynaptic activity. In neurones activated by stimulation of the sectioned nerve, the A-conditioning stimuli either failed to produce an inhibition or produced a weak and shorter effect. These results are discussed in terms of the possible functional significance of A-afferent mediated inhibition.