The effects of ethanol on the development of pentylenetetrazol (PTZ)-kindling as well as on fully PTZ-kindled convulsions in rats were investigated. Ethanol (0.5, 1.0 and 1.5 g/kg i.p.) administered 15 min prior to each PTZ-injection (35 mg/kg i.p.; 3 times/week) significantly inhibited the progressive seizure development compared to saline-treated controls. For the higher doses of ethanol the kindling process was restricted to seizure stages of 1 or 2. Tolerance to this antiepileptogenic action did not occur even after 20 PTZ-stimulations, In a second series of experiments, 0.5 g/kg ethanol administered 10h before each PTZ-injection facilitated the rate of kindling development after 7 to 10 PTZ-injections, while the higher doses of ethanol did not modulate or even slightly reduced the seizure development. In a third test, intermittent administration of a high dose of ethanol (2 g/kg p.o.: twice daily for 6 days) before the kindling procedure (0.5 g/kg i.p. ethanol 10h prior to each PTZ-injection), significantly intensified the kindling development. In addition, studies with fully PTZ-kindled rats demonstrated that ethanol (0.1 to 1.5 g/kg i.p.), given Ij min prior or 2 min after PTZ, reduced the seizure severity in a dose-dependent manner. In conclusion, the present findings provide evidence for pronounced antiepileptogenic and anticonvulsant effects of ethanol after acute application, whereas repeated administration of high doses with longer withdrawal periods leads to proconvulsant actions, possible mediated via neuroadaptive changes in NMDA and/or GABA(A) receptor-related mechanisms.