To investigate further the hyperglucagonemia of diabetes mellitus, the metabolic clearance rate (MCR) and acute disappearance time (t1/2) of unlabeled pancreatic glucagon were estimated in 9 normal subjects and 7 insulin-dependent diabetics, using a constant infusion technique. The mean MCR (.+-. SE) was similar for both groups (control: 9.0 .+-. 0.6; diabetics: 11.4 .+-. 1.0 ml/kg/min). The MCR was not influenced by the concentration of glucagon at the time of plateau, and the exogenous hormone appeared to be handled similarly to endogenous glucagon. The t1/2 calculated from the fractional decay rate of glucagon from plateau was significantly prolonged in the diabetics (t1/2 6.6 .+-. 0.5 min) compared with the control group (t1/2 4.8 .+-. 0.1 min, P < 0.01). Furthermore, there was no correlation between MCR and t1/2, for the control, diabetic, or combined group. The MCR of glucagon is apparently similar in normal and diabetic subjects. Since the acute disappearance time (t1/2) of glucagon is not identical in these 2 groups, it appears that the kinetics of the overall in vivo metabolism of pancreatic glucagon are not similar in diabetic and control subjects.