Chronic L-DOPA treatment of Parkinsons disease frequently leads to the development of motoric overstimulation and hyperkinetic movements. To investigate this problem in the laboratory, rats surgically altered by unilateral 6-hydroxydopamine lesions (6-OHDA) were chronically treated with one L-DOPA (10 mg/kg i.p.) injection per day for 20 days. In this 6-OHDA rotation model, the unilateral dopamine denervation results in a profound contralateral sensory-motor neglect and the animals spontaneously rotate in a direction ipsilateral to the dopamine depleted hemisphere. Initially, the L-DOPA treatment did not alter the response bias but after several weeks, the response bias was reversed and the animals rotated in the formerly akinetic direction, contralaterally, at a significantly higher level. Using this overstimulation effect as an analogue of the clinically observed L-DOPA overstimulation, animals were given naloxone in conjunction with the L-DOPA treatment. Naloxone (0.10, 0.25 and 0.50 mg/kg i.p.) produced a dose related decrease in the L-DOPA induced contralateral rotation. Consistent with an expected selective effect on the L-DOPA induced rotation, a dose related increase in ipsilateral rotation was observed. These results suggest that naloxone can attenuate the overstimulation effect of L-DOPA and that this effect is not attributable to non-specific response suppression effects.