Dynamic capillaroscopy has been shown to give valid measurements of skin capillary blood flow in adults. The aim of this investigation is to evaluate the accuracy of the method when applied to studies in newborn infants. A computerized videophotometric technique was used to measure the skin capillary blood cell velocity (CBV) and the capillary erythrocyte column diameter at 64 standardized locations in 16 nailfold capillaries in five subjects. To estimate the method's reliability, we calculated the coefficient of variation (CV = 1 SD/mean x 100%) for repeated measurements at each location. The CV for CBV determinations was found to be 3.4% (0.9-13%) and the corresponding value for capillary diameter measurements was 6.7% (0.5-12%) (median and range). Although the CBV and diameter values were found to vary along the course of the capillary, the volume flow of blood cells was assumed to be the same in simultaneously studied but different sections of the capillary. The paired CBV and diameter observations were therefore used to calculate blood cell flow values at an average of four different intracapillary locations. To estimate the method's validity, the CV for these repeated flow calculations was determined and found to be 7.5% (3.2-26%). We conclude that the age-specific characteristics in neonates, mainly a high hematocrit and short, irregular skin capillary loops, do not limit the feasibility and accuracy of videophotometric microscopy for dynamic microcirculatory studies in neonates.