A single dose of acrylonitrile can produce fatal adrenal apoplexy within approximately 2 h. Our previous studies also indicate that multiple injections of the chemical cause acute hemorrhagic and occasional nonperforating duodenal ulcers. Other authors have reported increase in gut and lung neoplasia after chronic exposure. The present study was designed to elucidate the subacute and chronic actions of acrylonitrile on the adrenals, stomach and duodenum by correlating biochemical, functional and morphologic investigations, as well as to gain insight into the mechanisms of action of acrylonitrile. Rats were exposed to 0, 0.0001% (1 ppm), 0.002%, 0.01%, 0.05% or 0.2% acrylonitrile in drinking water, or to the same amount of the chemical given through daily gavage, for 7, 21 or 60 days. Acrylonitrile caused a time- and dose-dependent decrease in plasma corticosterone levels; aldosterone was affected only by the 'high' dose and prolonged time of exposure. Young rats were more susceptible than adults to this action of acrylonitrile. The adrenal cortex, especially the zona fasciculata, was atrophic in rats that had ingested the nitrile through drinking water. At 0.05% and 0.2%, it also caused decreased food intake and body weight gain. The adrenals were enlarged with a hyperplastic zona fasciculata after daily doses of a bolus of acrylonitrile. Ingestion of the chemical did not interfere with compensatory enlargement of the adrenal gland following unilateral adrenalectomy. On the other hand, the ACTH-induced elevation of corticosterone plasma concentration was significantly attenuated by acrylonitrile in drinking water. Electron microscopy of the adrenal glands revealed no consistent changes in the steroid-producing cells. We thus postulate that accelerated turnover of circulating corticoids and/or interference with the secretion or action of ACTH may primarily be responsible for the decreased plasma levels of corticosterone and aldosterone in rats that ingest acrylonitrile. The mucosa in the stomach at the junction of the forestomach and glandular region of animals that had ingested acrylonitrile was hyperplastic. The corpus also showed regional mucosal hyperplasia with the appearance of 'cobble-stoning'. These changes were preceded and associated with an elevated concentration of non-protein sulfhydryls mostly in the mucosa of the glandular stomach. A similar, less prominent elevation also occurred in the proximal duodenum. These alterations may resemble the preneoplastic combination of elevated glutathione and focal hyperplasia described in the liver with hepatocarcinogens.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)