Intracellular recordings from in vitro guinea-pig hippocampal slices were obtained to investigate the mechanisms underlying activity-dependent depression of inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (IPSPs) in CA1 pyramidal neurons. IPSPs were studied following blockade of glutamatergic transmission. Attenuation of both fast and slow IPSP components was apparent at stimulus rates of > 0.2 Hz, but the late IPSP showed depression at even lower rates of stimulation. Overlap of these events made resolving response components during depression difficult. Fast IPSPs were isolated using CsCl-filled microelectrodes, blocking slow potassium-dependent IPSPs and reversing the chloride gradient. Under this condition repetitive stimulation did not induce IPSP depression. Other experiments showed slow IPSP depression at stimulus rates of < 0.5 Hz was relieved in the presence of picrotoxin which antagonizes GABA(A) events. These results suggest that activity-dependent depression of the fast IPSP results largely from chloride accumulation as a consequence of repetitive activation. Depression of the slow IPSP appears to arise from at least two components: (1) a masking of the slow hyperpolarization resulting from an apparent increase in the depolarizing GABA response due to chloride accumulation; and (2) a novel process involving GABA(A) receptors, perhaps mediated through presynaptic inhibition.