Heartworm-infected dogs were treated therapeutically with a new heartworm adulticide (melarsomine dihydrochloride, RM 340) and then put on a Strategic Program with treatment every 4 months for clinical prophylaxis to take advantage of the drug's potent activity against 4-month-old immature as well as adult Dirofilaria immitis. Ten random-source dogs with naturally acquired heartworm infections (microfilariae- and antigen-positive) were given melarsomine (2.2 mg kg - 1 twice 3 h apart) by i.m. injection in the lumbar muscles to clear their existing infections. They were then placed outdoors (August 1988) in a high-risk area in Georgia (USA) for heartworm transmission and given melarsomine at the same posology every 4 months (Strategic Program) for 12 months as a clinical prophylactic measure. Five nontreated heartworm-naive beagles placed at this site during the same period served as controls to monitor heartworm transmission. After exposure for 12 months, the ten treated and five control dogs were taken indoors and held for 5 months. Microfilaremia and antigenemia levels were monitored in both groups by testing at 4-5 month intervals throughout the study and the intensity of infection was determined at necropsy.Microfilaremia levels in treated dogs dropped dramatically following the initial therapeutic treatment and remained either negative or low. Only two of the five control dogs became microfilaremic, and this occurred near the end of the study.Nine of the ten treated dogs were antigen-negative 4 months after the initial therapeutic treatment, and all of them were antigen-negative at all bleedings thereafter. Four of the five control dogs were antigen-positive at necropsy, and only one of these was positive 4 months earlier. Based on these antigen data, the initial treatment cleared 90% of the dogs of worms, and no worms were detected in any of the treated dogs thereafter. However, it is possible that undetectable immature heartworms were present.Although all of the treated dogs were antigen-negative at necropsy, three of them had a total of eight heartworms, seven of which were clearly immature, as determined by worm length measurements, and the remaining worm was a young adult female that was probably too young to be detected. All of the five control dogs had heartworms (average 7.4; range 1-16), and about half of these worms were clearly immatures. Therapeutic treatment followed by strategic treatment with melarsomine every 4 months during reexposure was at least 89.2% effective overall. The drug appeared to be safe and fully effective against heartworms of about 4 months of age and older but appeared to be less effective against larvae which were only a few weeks old.