We compared cortisol responses to 1 mu g adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), 250 mu g ACTH and insulin-induced hypoglycaemia (IIH), in patients suspected to have secondary hypocortisolism. Twenty-four patients (16 with hypothalamopituitary disorders and 8 on long-term glucocorticoid therapy) and eight healthy controls, underwent all three test protocols, with intervals of one day between each test. Mean cortisol responses to all three tests were comparable in both groups, but were more closely correlated for IIH vs. the 1 mu g ACTH test (r=0.96) than for IIH vs. the 250 mu g ACTH test (r=0.88). Seven patients had discrepant results; all had a normal peak cortisol response to 250 mu g ACTH (>550 nmol/l), but a subnormal response to 1 mu g ACTH. Six of these also had a subnormal response to IIH. Cortisol responses to IIH match more closely those for 1 mu g ACTH in individual instances than those for 250 mu g ACTH. The standard 250 mu g ACTH stimulation, being supra-physiological, leads to underdiagnosis of the hypocortisolaemic state. The 1 mu g ACTH stimulation test should replate the standard 250 mu g ACTH stimulation test in assessing the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenocortical axis in secondary hypocortisolism.