Kava pyrones are pharmacologically active compounds extracted from Piper methysticum Forst. Because kava pyrones were characterized by their anticonvulsive, analgesic and centrally muscle relaxing action, we investigated the influence of(+/-)-kavain, a synthetic kava pyrone, on veratridine-stimulated increase in intrasynaptosomal Na+ concentration ([Na+](i)) of rat cerebrocortical synaptosomes. [Na+](i) was measured spectrofluorometrically employing SBFI as Na+ sensitive fluorescence dye. Veratridine (5 mu mol/l) enhanced basal [Na+](i) 6.6-fold from 11.3 to 74.1 mmol/l Na+. Incubation of synaptosomes for 100 sec with (+/-)-kavain was sufficient to reduce dose dependently the stimulated increase of [Na+](i) with an IC50 value of 86.0 mu mol/l, and almost complete inhibition of Na+-channels was attained with 400 mu mol/l (+/-)-kavain. The reference compounds, procain (400 mu mol/l) and tetrodotoxin (TTX, 10 mu mol/l) reduced veratridine-elevated [Na+](i) to 30.4% and 7.9% of control whereas the centrally acting muscle relaxant mephenesin (400 mu mol/l) was without any effect. Postapplication of 400 mu mol/l (+/-)-kavain or 10 mu mol/l TTX immediately diminished veratridine-elevated [Na+](i) to nearly basal levels with a half life time of 69.7 and 41.8 sec, respectively. To study the influence of(+/-)-kavain on non stimulated synaptosomes, an increase in [Na+](i) was induced by 200 mu mol/l ouabain, which enhanced [Na+](i) hyperbolically with an initial rate of 18.4 mmol Na+/l min. Preincubation of synaptosomes with 400 mu mol/l (+/-)-kavain or 10 mu mol/l TTX partly prevented Na+-influx for both compounds to the same extent of about 57% of control. The presented data indicate a fast and specific inhibition of voltage-dependent Na+-channels by (+/-)-kavain.