Accelerated healing of foot-rot cases after vaccination with Bacteroides nodosus confirms the aetiological role of this organism in the disease. There is a variation in the degree of response. It may range from an increased body weight of affected vaccinated sheep to complete resolution of clinical signs and lesions. The degree of response following vaccination is influenced by the adjuvant incorporated in vaccines. Oil emulsion vaccines were superior to aqueous alum-precipitated preparations. A saponin derivative, Quil A, enhanced the effect of alum-precipitated vaccines in a therapeutic experiment. High agglutinin titres to vaccine strains develop in immunised sheep. Recovery from infection has been demonstrated in animals with high agglutinin titres to the immunising B. nodosus but with low titres to the strain of B. nodosus with which sheep were infected. Antibodies other than those directed against the pili of B. nodosus may be involved in the mediation of the demonstrated therapeutic response.