Isolates of type 3 poliovirus from vaccine-recipients were characterized in terms of virulence, sensitivity of growth to high temperatures, and differences in genome structure from the Sabin type 3 vaccine strain. These included point mutations in the region of the genome coding for the structural proteins and in the 5' noncoding region, and the presence of type 1 or type 2 poliovirus genomic sequences resulting from intertypic recombination. Isolates from healthy vaccinees resembled those from vaccine-associated cases of poliomyelitis in all of these properties. Suppression of the temperature-sensitive phenotype was strictly correlated with reversion to virulence in nonrecombinant type 3 strains. Recombinant isolates were more attenuated than expected, even when they had lost all mutations known to attenuate the type 3 vaccine strain.