Escherichia coli strains belonging to serogroups O 138 and O 139 isolated from pigs with edema disease, were characterized with respect to the presence of genes encoding Shiga-like toxin I, Shiga-like toxin II and Shiga-like toxin IIv (SLT I, SLT II and SLT IIv). Genes coding for the heat-stable and heat-labile enterotoxins (ST I and LT I) were also detected. Plasmid profiling, restriction enzyme digestion of total DNA, and ribotyping were performed for further characterization of the strains. The oligonucleotide probes applied in this study appeared to be useful tools for detecting genes coding cytotoxins and enterotoxins. DNA from 12 of 16 strains hybridized with two SLT II probes, and DNA from two SLT IIv encoding strains also hybridized with the ST I probe. DNA from one SLT IIv negative strain hybridized with the LT I probe. The results from plasmid profiling, restriction enzyme digestion, and ribotyping were compared with serogrouping in attempts to distinguish between the different E. coli edema disease isolates. Fourteen different plasmid profiles were identified, and as restriction patterns barely did, and ribotyping patterns did not, reveal any information useful for differentiation of the strains beyond serogroup level, plasmid profiling seemed to be the most suitable method for discrimination between the edema disease strains investigated here.