We investigated wether zincuria is associated with microalbuminuria in type I (insulin-dependent) diabetics (IDDM). In 169 IDDM, 215 overnight urine samples were collected for simultaneous assay of zinc and albumin. In 76 samples with excessive microalbuminuria (> 15 mg/L), zincuria was higher than in the 139 other samples (0.83 +/- 0.06 vs 0.58 +/- 0.03 mg/L p < 0.001), though zincuria and microalbuminuria were not significantly correlated. An execrise provocation test was performed in 78 IDDM. Although microalbuminuria increased, zincuria did not change during the test. Another group of 83 IDDM underwent urinary zinc determination over a period of 1 h of recumbency. The 48 patients who had a zincuria higher than the mean + 2 SD of control values had higher microalbuminuria at rest (48 +/- 16-mu-g/min vs 12 +/- 2 p < 0.01) and after excercise (111 +/- 33 vs 42 +/- 14 p < 0.02) than the remaining 35 subjects. Both subgroups did not differ for zinc intake and zincemia. Thus, incipient nephropathy as detected by the measurement of microalbuminuria is associated with a highly significant increase in zinc excretion, which is not proportional to albumin leakage, nor is it amplified during exercise. Hyperzincuria is not explained by an increase in zinc intake and does not result in hypozincemia.