The present study was performed to appreciate the potential role that thyroid deficiency could play in the energy homeostasis and lipid metabolism of experimental chronic renal failure. For this purpose, 12 uremic rats that were supplemented with T3 (0.4 microgram/100 g body weight/day) during 5 weeks by means of osmotically driven minipumps were compared to 12 unsupplemented uremic rats and 12 control rats. The chronic supplementation of uremic rats with T3 induced no significant change in body weight gain or in the serum concentration of insulin, glucose, glycerol, nonesterified fatty acids, total triglycerides (TG), total cholesterol, and total choline phospholipids. Similarly, the metabolism of TG-rich lipoproteins was not affected by the supplementation with T3 in these uremic rats as appreciated by TG production or TG degradation (adipose tissue lipoprotein lipase activity). T3 administration induced a significant decrease in serum beta-hydroxybutyrate concentration and an increase in serum lactate concentration. Furthermore, heparin-releasable hepatic TG lipase activity as expressed per total liver mass was decreased in uremic rats treated with T3. The latter changes were observed in the absence of modifications of serum glucose or TG concentration. We conclude from these observations that rats with a moderate degree of chronic uremia do not seem to have a cellular thyroid deficiency sufficient to disturb their energy or lipid metabolism.