The problem of pruritus in uremic dialysed patients remains unsolved. The etiology of pruritus has not been precisely explained, and sometimes no efficient treatment is available. The aim of this study was to analyse the relationship between somatic neuropathy and pruritus as well as the relationship between pruritus and dysautonomia. Fifty-one patients with end-stage renal failure underwent basic neurological examination, nerve conduction velocity studies, and pruritus assessment by means of a questionnaire. Two tests were used to assess the autonomic nervous system, namely the R-R interval variation test in basal and profound breath conditions (RRIV) and the sympathetic skin response (SSR). Pruritus was found in 63% patients of the sample. Most of them had clinical symptoms and signs of peripheral sensorimotor neuropathy and dysautonomia. About 59% of uremic patients revealed abnormally reduced RRIV. About 45% of patients had abnormal (delayed or absent) SSR. The pruritus in uremic patients occurred significantly more frequently (P < 0.01) in patients with paresthesia. A nonsignificant but sizeable trend towards a relationship of pruritus with hypohidrosis and pathological SSR results was also observed. There was no relationship between the pruritus presence and RRIV results. According to our results the activity of the nervous system might play an important role in the mechanism of uremic pruritus, but paradoxically this latter appeared more tightly related to somatic neuropathy than to autonomic dysfunction. Our results also suggest that SSR may become a useful technique for the assessment of autonomic dysfunction in uremic patients.