OBJECTIVES--To describe neurohormonal activation in patients with mild or moderate heart failure and how it may be modified by treatment with ramipril. SETTING--Cardiology departments at 24 hospitals in Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Sweden. PATIENTS--223 patients with mild or moderately severe congestive heart failure who were taking diuretics with or without digitalis. DESIGN--Randomised, double bind, multicentre, placebo controlled comparison of ramipril and placebo. Venous blood samples were drawn at rest, before blind treatment, and after 12 weeks of treatment with the study drug. A probability prediction score for mortality derived by stepwise linear discriminant from neurohormone data in the first cooperative north Scandinavian enalapril survival study (CONSENSUS I) was used to assess combined activity of the different neurohormonal systems. RESULTS--Plasma concentrations of atrial natriuretic peptide were raised at baseline but angiotensin II, aldosterone, and noradrenaline concentrations were within normal limits. There was, however, a wide interindividual variation. Plasma noradrenaline concentration and prediction score were higher among patients with class III congestive heart failure according to the New York Heart Association's classification than among patients with class II congestive heart failure (P