We sought to determine the effect of exogenously administered platelet-activating factor (PAF) on eicosanoid release from the left colon of the rabbit. Using an isolated buffer-perfused rabbit left colon preparation, 1.0- or 5.0-μg doses of PAF were infused into the inferior mesenteric artery. Effluents from the inferior mesenteric vein and colonic lumen were collected and the concentrations of the eicosanoids, prostaglandin E, 6-ketoprostaglandin F 1α , thromboxane B 2 , and leukotriene B 4 (LTB 4 ), were measured by ELISA. During PAF infusion there was a significant increase of all prostanoids, but not LTB 4 into the venous effluent and colonic luminal perfusate when compared to control experiments. Additional studies were performed by pretreating the colons with the PAF antagonists WEB-2170 or alprazolam prior to PAF infusion. Both venous and luminal effluent prostanoid release was effectively blocked by WEB-2170, but not by alprazolam. Colons pretreated with WEB-2170 prior to PAF had markedly diminished tissue injury when compared to colons treated with PAF alone. Inhibition of PAF-stimulated prostanoid release by WEB-2170 suggests that a PAF-sensitive receptor is present in rabbit colonic tissue which may induce eicosanoid-mediated tissue injury.