Despite its structural similarity to codeine, tramadol is an unusual analgesic whose antinociceptive efficacy is not solely a result of opioid actions but also of its apparent capacity to block monoamine uptake. Tramadol is a mixture of stereoisomers. in this study, we have examined the actions of racemic, (+)- and (-)-tramadol, in addition to O-desmethyltramadol (the main human metabolite), on electrically evoked norepinephrine efflux and uptake in the locus coeruleus brain slice, measured by fast cyclic voltammetry. Racemic tramadol and its (+)- and (-)-enantiomers (all at 5 mu mol litre(-1)) significantly increased stimulated norepinephrine efflux (P<0.01) by mean 66 (SEM 10)%, 57 (7)% and 64 (13)%, respectively. However, only (-)-tramadol blocked norepinephrine reuptake (P<0.01), increasing the reuptake half-time to 499 (63)% of pre-drug values. The metabolite O-desmethyl tramadol was inactive at the concentration tested (5 mu mol litre(-1)). in the case of (-)-tramadol, the effect on norepinephrine efflux was directly proportional to, but significantly smaller than, the effect on norepinephrine uptake (P<0.01). This appeared to be a result of compensatory alpha(2A) autoreceptor tone as the selective alpha(2A) autoreceptor antagonist BRL 44408 (1 mu mol litre(-1)) eliminated this difference when its own effects on norepinephrine reuptake were taken into account. The efficacy of (-)-tramadol on norepinephrine uptake, at clinically relevant concentrations, may contribute to its antinociceptive efficacy.