The purpose of the present study was to investigate the effects of Se restriction on the excretion of Se in men who had consumed high levels of this element during their entire lives. With the use of stable isotopes of Se as selenite, the excretion of methylated Se in urine was investigated in Chinese men (n 10) who had habitual chronic high intakes of this element. The relationship between either urine Se or trimethylselenonium (TMSe) to the estimated long-term Se intake was not linear over the entire range of intake, which was also true for the infusion of labelled selenite. A non-linear relationship was also found between urine TMSe and urine Se both for TMSe arising from catabolism of endogenous body Se and that from infused selenite. The data suggest a close precursor–product relationship of urine Se and its TMSe component based on the nearly identical specific activities for these two selenocompounds. Although dimethylselenide in breath was not measured in the present study, combining urinary TMSe with this breath test may be more useful in the assessment of long-term Se status.