The Toxoplasma dye test of Sabin and Feldman,1which is the mainstay of the present diagnostic regimen in presumptive ocular toxoplasmosis, appears to be inadequate on a number of accounts. Although Woods,* has recently shown that a serum titer of 1:64 is statistically significant in a group of adult patients with granulomatous uveitis, there is no definite proof that a given lesion in the uveal tract of such a patient is due to toxoplasmosis, as opposed to one of the other common granulomatous infections. The simultaneous existence of a positive serum dye test titer, due, perhaps, to a previous systemic infection with Toxoplasma, and a granulomatous uveitis due, for example, to tuberculosis, is a real possibility. Woods, moreover, stated that 25% of a nonuveitis control group which was studied serologically at the Johns Hopkins Hospital also showed positive dye tests at a titer of 1:64. Pursuant to a study