Nine healthy volunteers and 25 tropical pulmonary eosinophilia (TPE) patients were used to study circadian variations of absolute eosinophil count (AEC) and serum histaminase activity (SHA). A marked circadian variation was found in AEC for healthy volunteers and TPE patients with the worst symptoms in the late evening and morning hours only; no rhythm could be detected in SHA for healthy subjects. However, TPE patients with worst symptoms in the late evening hours did exhibit a significant rhythm in SHA. Increased SHA in all TPE patients at all time-points of the 24 hour day-night cycle, irrespective of the worsening hours of symptoms in comparison to healthy controls, could be due to increased histamine production in such situations.