The oxyntic mucosa in the rat stomach is under the influence of circulating gastrin. The histamine-producing enterochromaffin-like (ECL) cells constitute the major endocrine cell population in the oxyntic mucosa. They are notably sensitive to changes in the serum gastrin concentration and respond to long-term hypergastrinemia with hyperplasia, whereas hypogastrinemia induces hypoplasia. In the present study long-term, sustained hypergastrinemia was induced by daily treatment with a high dose of the proton pump inhibitor omeprazole. After 10 weeks omeprazole-treated and control rats were antrectomized, resulting in prompt hypogastrinemia. Antrectomy was followed by a rapid reduction of the thickness of the oxyntic mucosa and a somewhat slower reduction of the ECL cell number in both omeprazole-treated and control rats. The percentage decrease in the ECL cell number with time was similar in both groups; after 2-3 weeks the ECL cell number was half of that before antrectomy in both groups. Interestingly, however, 12 weeks after antrectomy the ECL cell number in the omeprazole-pretreated rats remained elevated compared with untreated rats. The histamine concentration of the oxyntic mucosa was markedly lowered within a week after antrectomy in both omeprazole-treated and control rats. Although antrectomy induces hypogastrinemia and although atrophy develops rapidly in the oxyntic mucosa, the omeprazole-induced ECL cell hyperplasia was not completely reversed by antrectomy during the 12 weeks of examination.