Thin films of overoxidized polypyrrole have been electro-chemically coated onto carbon fiber microelectrodes and used for dopamine measurements with background-substracted, fast-scan cyclic voltammetry at a scan rate of 300 V/s. The films were stable on the electrode surface only when the electrodes were scanned to high potentials (1400 mV vs SSCE) in pH 7.4 aqueous buffer. Dopamine sensitivity and ascorbate and dihydroxyphenylacetic acid (DOPAC) rejection at the overoxidized polypyrrole-coated electrode were compared to those at carbon fiber electrodes coated with Nafion, a perfluorinated ion-exchange material. At 300 V/s, the overoxidized polypyrrole-coated electrode was almost 3 times more sensitive to dopamine than an uncoated disk electrode. Furthermore, the films were as effective as Nafion in the attenuation of the response to ascorbate and DOPAC, common interferences of dopamine in vivo. Overoxidized polypyrrole-coated electrodes maintained a stable response to dopamine for several hours when implanted in the rat brain. The electrochemical deposition procedure was effective at both elliptical and cylindrical electrodes. This is in contrast to the dip-coating procedures employed with Nafion films that lead to nonuniform coatings at cylindrical electrodes.