The circadian rhythm of ventricular fibrillation threshold (VFT) and its relation to the heart rate (HR) and the rectal temperature (RT) was studied in female Wistar rats. The animals were exposed to daily light-dark cycles of 12 h of light alternating with 12 h of darkness and were under pentobarbital anaesthesia (40 mg/kg i.p.). The experiments were performed on open chest animals and VFT was measured by direct stimulation of the myocardium. VFT in female rats showed a circadian rhythm with the acrophase -338° (at 22.53 h), with the mesor 2.58 mA and the amplitude 0.33 mA. HR was not significantly changed during the experiments and no dependence was found between VFT and HR during the whole 24-hour period (r=0.08). The acrophase of the circadian rhythm of HR (on -47°, i.e. at 03.08 h) was shifted to the acrophase of VFT. The circadian rhythms of RT before the application of the anaesthetic agent and under general anaesthesia before the operative interventions had a very similar course with the nearly corresponding acrophoses as the circadian rhythm of VFT. It is concluded that the electrical stability of the rat heart measured by VFT shows the significant circadian rhythm in a parallel with the circadian rhythm of RT and probably without dependence on the changes of HR.