Neurohumoral factors were assessed in 14 subjects with chronic, stable New York Heart Association functional class II or III congestive heart failure and nine comparably aged normal subjects at rest and during moderate (50 W) and strenuous (100 W) upright exercise. Heart failure was associated with elevated plasma renin activity and plasma antidiuretic hormone (ADH) concentrations at rest. However, plasma renin activity almost doubled (from 4.7 +/- 0.6 to 8.4 +/- 1.1 ng/ml per hour) during strenuous exercise in subjects with heart failure, and changed only minimally in normal control subjects. Plasma ADH concentration did not change during exercise in the presence of heart failure, but rose in normal subjects during strenuous exercise to levels comparable to those of subjects with heart failure. Similar plasma osmolality values were present in both groups. Circulating norepinephrine concentrations were insignificantly elevated by heart failure both at rest and during exercise, and plasma epinephrine concentrations were similar. These findings suggest independent neurohumoral activation during exercise in the presence of congestive heart failure, with predominant activation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone axis.