The heart weight and the structure of coronary and carotid arteries were studied in NO-deficient hypertension. Wistar rats were administered L-NAME (50 mg/kg/day) in drinking water for a period of 8 weeks. The blood pressure and heart rate were recorded weekly. In one group of control and experimental animals the heart weight was assessed and the heart/body weight ratio (relative heart weight) was calculated. In the other group of control and experimental animals, the cardiovascular system was perfused by a fixative under constant perfusion pressure. The inner circumference and the wall thickness (tunica intima and tunica media) of the coronary (septal branch) and carotid artery were measured using light microscopy and the wall/diameter ratio was calculated. Inhibition of NO synthase induced a significant increase in blood pressure (187.2±4.2 mm Hg compared to 131.4±1.9 mm Hg in the controls, p<0.01). The heart rate decreased (334.4±7.0 beats/min compared to 352.6±4.1 beats/min in the controls, p<0.05). The heart weight increased in NO-deficient rats (132±0.08 g versus 1.10±0.03 g, p<0.05); the heart/body weight index increased remarkably (3.09±0.15 compared to 2.10±0.04 in the controls, p<0.01). Morphometry of the septal branch of the left coronary artery indicated a decrease of the inner circumference (664±24 /um versus 832±30 //m, p<0.01), the increased wall thickness (21.15±0.84 jtm compared to 12.47±0.62 Jim in the controls, p<0.01) and the remarkably changed wall/diameter ratio (1:10 versus 1:21 in the controls). Similar alterations were found in the carotid arteries: the inner circumference was decreased (2456±39 Jim versus 2732±66 /¿m, p<0.01), the wall thickness increased (45.14±0.41 jim compared to 26.08±1.23 fim, p<0.01) and the wall/diameter ratio was changed to 1:17 in comparison with 133 in the controls. In conclusion, cardiac hypertrophy and structural alterations of the coronary artery and carotid artery accompany NO-deficient hypertension.