Background: Peripheral nociceptive barrage after tissue injury results in acute pain and a variety of physiologic responses, including pituitary secretion of beta-endorphin, This study evaluated whether administration of the pharmacologically active S(+)-isomer of ibuprofen suppresses acute pain and plasma beta-endorphin levels in the oral surgery model of acute pain, Methods: Subjects in a single-dose, double-blind, parallel-group study received either 200 mg S(+)-ibuprofen, 400 mg S(+)-ibuprofen, 400 mg racemic ibuprofen, or placebo. Both doses of S(+)-ibuprofen resulted in significantly greater analgesia over the first 60 minutes in comparison to racemic ibuprofen and placebo; the 400 mg dose of S(+)-ibuprofen also produced greater analgesia at 2 and 3 hours. Plasma levels of immunoreactive beta-endorphin decreased over time coincident with the onset of analgesia in all groups but were significantly less than placebo after both doses of S(+)-ibuprofen from 30 to 120 minutes, Conclusions: These findings show that, compared with racemic ibuprofen, administration of the S(+)-isomer of ibuprofen results in faster analgesic onset, greater peak analgesia, similar duration of action, and a low incidence of adverse effects, while suppressing nociceptive activation of the pituitary-adrenal axis.