To determine whether the dose of atropine affects the rate of neostigmine-induced recovery from vecuronium-induced neuromuscular blockade, the authors monitored isometric adductor pollicis mechanical activity in 36 anesthetized (thiopental, fentanyl, nitrous oxide) adult patients (ASA physical status 1 or 2). Once surgery was completed and twitch height had spontaneously regained 25% of its initial value, the patients were randomly allocated into three groups (A1O, A15, A20; n = 12 in each group) according to the dose of atropine (10, 15, or 20-mu-/kg) that was mixed with 40-mu-g/kg neostigmine. Twitch height, train-of-four, and 50- and 100-Hz tetanic fade were recorded for 15 min after the administration of the reversal agents. No significant differences were found among the three groups in the final twitch height (95% +/- 2%), train-of-four (87% +/- 1%, 88% +/- 2%, 89% +/- 1%), and 50-Hz tetanic fade (90% +/- 1%, 94% +/- 1%, 93% +/- 1%) (mean +/- SEM). Fifteen minutes after reversal, fade in response to 100-Hz tetanus was statistically greater in the A10 group than in the two other groups (70% +/- 3% of control versus 84% +/- 4% and 81% +/- 2%) (mean +/- SEM, P < 0.05). The present results demonstrate that larger doses of atropine facilitate neostigmine's reversal of vecuronium neuromuscular blockade. The clinical implications of the differences observed in this study remain to be determined.