[Ca2+]i increase is necessary in physiological platelet activity, particularly aggregation and release. The increase of [Ca2+]i observed during platelet activation depends in part on Ca2+ influx from the extracellular medium. The participation of voltage-operated Ca2+ channels as a pathway for Ca2+ entry is controversial. In the present study we have attempted to reinvestigate this problem by measuring aggregation and [Ca2+]i changes in platelets activated by ADP or thrombin and incubated with organic or inorganic blockers of calcium channels. The main findings of the present paper can be summarized as follows: (i) Ni2+, Co2+ and Mn2+, well known inorganic blockers of Ca2+ channels, inhibited platelet aggregation induced by ADP or thrombin in a dose-dependent manner, Ni2+ being the most effective agent. (ii) Thrombin induced a rise in free [Ca2+]i in platelets incubated both in 1 mmol/l Ca2+-containing medium and in nominally Ca2+-free medium; the rise of free [Ca2+]i was in the first case up to 370 +/- 31 nmol/l and in the second case up to 242 +/- 26 nmol/l, indicating that this observed difference was due to Ca2+ entry from the extracellular medium. Co2+ and Ni2+ abolished that difference by inhibiting Ca2+ influx. (iii) Nisoldipine, nitrendipine and nimodipine (10-50 nmol/l) inhibited in a dose-dependent manner platelet aggregation induced by either ADP or thrombin in platelets incubated in normal-Ca2+ normal-K+ medium, also, aggregation was inhibited to a similar extent in platelets incubated in normal-Ca2+ high-K+ medium. (iv) Nisoldipine - the most effective dihydropyridine to inhibit platelet aggregation - also inhibited Ca2+ influx in platelets incubated in normal-Ca2+ medium, either in normal-K+ or high-K+ media. Our data support the existence of voltage-operated, dihydropyridine-sensitive calcium channels (L-type) and a physiological role for them in platelet function.