Recent evidence has suggested that face-mask ventilation of very low birthweight (VLBW) infants may have serious neurological consequences. The 30 surviving VLBW infants from the neonatal intensive care unit at Hammersmith Hospital who had received ventilatory support via face masks over a 25-month period have been reviewed and compared with a control group. Neuropathological findings in the VLBW infants who died during this time have also been reviewed in relation to their ventilatory management. The findings suggest that face-mask treament did not have a major deleterious effect on the surviving infants. The factors which may determine the neurological sequelae of this form of ventilatory support are discussed.