Electrical stimulation of the tongue and the proximal cut end of the lingual nerve caused a blood flow to increase in a stimulus-intensity dependent manner in the ipsilateral lower lip of the cats. Pretreatment with hexamethonium (an autonomic ganglionic blocker, 1.0 mg/kg) abolished the vasodilator response, while atropine, phentolamine, propranolol and tripelennamine had no effect on these vasoresponses. Ipsilateral sections of either the glossopharyngeal nerve root, inferior alveolar nerve or mental nerve at the main mental foramen, but not at the posterior mental foramen, abolished the vasodilator response caused by electrical stimulation of the tongue and the lingual nerve. Electrical stimulation of the distal cut ends of the glossopharyngeal nerve root and inferior alveolar nerve caused the vasodilator and vasoconstrictor responses, whereas stimulation of the tongue and the proximal cut ends of the lingual nerve did not elicit the vasoconstrictor response. These results suggest that reflex vasodilatation in the cat mandibular devision is exclusively mediated via activation of the parasympathetic nerve fibers, and that selective excitation of the parasympathetic nerve fibers in the oral area is possible.