The suitability of technetium (
99m
Tc), a gamma emitter, for labeling of
Diplococcus pneumoniae
in studies of lung bacterial clearance was examined. A killed bacterial slurry with high specific activity was obtained with a ferric ascorbate reducing system. Approximately 5.5% of radioactive counts dissociated from labeled bacteria in 6 h. Rats were exposed to a uniformly mixed aerosol of untagged, viable pneumococci and killed,
99m
Tc-tagged pneumococci. The aerodynamic behavior of labeled and unlabeled pneumococci was similar. Viable bacterial counts and radioactive counts were determined in lung homogenates at intervals following exposure, and rates of bacterial killing and disappearance of radioactive counts were plotted. Radioactive counts did not increase in the liver during the period of observation, suggesting that the decrease in lung radioactivity represents mucociliary clearance and not release of isotope to the systemic circulation. The use of
99m
Tc for bacterial labeling provides advantages of technical simplicity and personnel safety compared to the use of beta-emitting isotopes.