Na+ currents were measured in myelinated frog nerve fibres in the presence of nanomolar concentrations of tetrodotoxin (TTX) or saxitoxin (STX) in the extracellular solution. The Na+ currents declined during a train of depolarizing pulses if the fibre was held at hyperpolarizing potentials between the pulses. At a pulse frequency of 0.8 Hz, the peak Na+ currents were reduced to 70 or 60% of the initial value in 9.3 nM TTX and 3.5 nM STX solutions, respectively. A decline of Na+ currents was also observed in two-pulse experiments. The peak Na+ current during a second test pulse did not depend on the duration (0.2 to 12 ms) of the first pulse. It decreased with increasing interval between the pulses, reached a minimum and increased again. The results are interpreted with a use-dependent blockage of Na+ channels by TTX or STX at negative holding potentials. The effects were described quantitatively, assuming a fast affinity increase of toxin receptors at Na+ channels triggered by Na+ activation followed by slow toxin binding to channels and relaxation of the receptor affinity.