Abstract. A male patient with corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) and adrenocorticotropin (ACTH)-producing syndrome is described. Soon after being referred to us the patient developed pneumonia, anaemia, oedema and respiratory distress, and died on the 24th day after admission. Autopsy and histology revealed that he had a rare type of multiple endocrine neoplasia (type 1 + paraganglioma) with a mediastinal paraganglioma, parathyroidal hyperplasia, pancreatic islet cell adenoma, duodenal multiple carcinoid tumours and adrenocortical nodular hyperplasia. It was not possible to examine the pituitary. The paraganglioma contained a large amount of immunoreactive (IR)-CRF (606 ng/g wet weight), IR-ACTH (59.4 ng/g wet weight), IR-human proopiomelanocortin n-terminal (1–76) peptide (hNT, 156.8 ng/g wet weight) and IR-β-lipotropin (β-LPH, 146.9 ng/g wet weight). The major IR-ACTH, β-LPH and IR-hNT were eluted at ACTH-(1–39), β-LPH and hNT marker positions, respectively. Big ACTH was not detected. IR-CRF eluted at the human CRF marker position on Sephadex G-75 chromatography and high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). The IR-CRF fraction from the HPLC showed CRF bioactivity which paralleled that of synthetic human CRF in monolayer cultured rat anterior pituitary cells. Our results suggest that not only ACTH but CRF produced by the paraganglioma was responsible for the patient's Cushing's syndrome.