ACTH-(1-24), intravenously injected at the dose of 160 micrograms/kg to rats bled to the point of otherwise irreversible hypovolemic shock, causes a prompt and sustained increase in blood pressure and pulse amplitude, all treated rats surviving at the end of the experiment (2 hr). Bilateral vagotomy, as well as atropine sulphate (2 mg/kg i.p. immediately before bleeding), almost completely abolishes the anti-shock activity of ACTH. These data indicate that a central cholinergic pathway and vagal afferent (but not efferent) fibers play an important role in the anti-shock effect of ACTH.