The plasma profiles of valproate (VPA), its beta-oxidation metabolites E-2-en-VPA and 3-oxo-VPA and its terminal desaturation metabolite 4-en-VPA, have been measured in a patient receiving NaVPA 1000 mg twice per day from early in the course of serious hepatotoxicity and for 2 weeks after the drug was stopped. Concurrent profiles of liver, renal and haematological function parameters were available. Relative to concurrent plasma VPA concentrations, E-2-en-VPA concentrations were not different to those of the VPA-treated epileptic population at any stage of the illness, whereas 3-oxo-VPA concentrations relative to concurrent VPA concentrations were abnormally high early in the toxicity, abnormally low at its peak (3-5 days later), and comfortably within normal limits for the treated epileptic population late in the recovery phase (9-13 days from the onset). When measurable, plasma 4-en-VPA concentrations were not elevated. The elimination half-life of VPA during the recovery phase was 100 h, which is some 6-12 times greater than values reported for this parameter in normal patients. These data clearly define, in this patient, a link between idiosyncratic VPA-associated hepatotoxicity at its onset and peak and the later stages of VPA beta-oxidation. Whether the beta-oxidation abnormalities are causative or a consequence of an as yet undefined defect is unknown. In this patient, 4-en-VPA was unlikely to have been involved in the pathogenesis of the toxicity.