Histological studies including electron microscopy were performed on the carotid sinuses of dogs with renal hypertension of 17 to 82 days duration or hypertension of two years secondary to aortic coarctation. Physiological abnormalities in the baroreceptors including resetting had been demonstrated before death. Histologically there were no qualitative or quantitative differences in the intrasinus nerve fibers of the hypertensive animals compared tp controls with normal blood pressures, and there was no evidence that baroreceptor degeneration occurred as a consequence of the hypertension. Structural lesions confined to the intima were evident in the sinus walls of some of the renal hypertensive animals whereas the dogs with coarctation showed more advanced sinus wall changes including medial calcification and enlargement of the vascular lumen.