This site provides educational information only — always consult your veterinarian.

Bird Medications & Health Conditions

Avian medicine is a specialized field with pharmacological challenges distinct from mammalian veterinary care. Birds have extremely fast metabolic rates, unique respiratory anatomy (air sacs instead of a diaphragm), and a renal portal system that can affect how injected drugs reach systemic circulation. Nearly all medications used in birds are off-label, and most require compounding into liquid suspensions appropriate for small body sizes. Birds are also masters at hiding illness — by the time a bird "looks sick," the disease may be significantly advanced. Finding an avian-experienced veterinarian and acting quickly when symptoms appear are both critical to successful treatment.

This information is for educational purposes only. Always consult an avian veterinarian before giving any medication to your bird. Never use flea/tick products designed for dogs or cats on birds.

Psittacosis treatment note: Psittacosis (Chlamydia psittaci) requires a minimum 45-day course of doxycycline in psittacine birds. This extended treatment duration is necessary for complete clearance of the organism. Shorter courses result in treatment failure and continued shedding. Psittacosis is zoonotic — it can be transmitted to humans.

Common Conditions in Birds

Pet birds — including parrots, cockatiels, budgies, and finches — are susceptible to respiratory, gastrointestinal, and behavioral conditions that require specialized avian veterinary care.

Common Medications for Birds

Most avian medications are used off-label and require compounding. Dosing is weight-based and species-specific — a medication dose for a macaw may differ from that for a budgie. Always work with an avian veterinarian for accurate dosing.

Antibiotics

Antifungals

Anti-Inflammatory & Pain

Antiparasitic

Behavioral

Emergency & Reproductive

Important Safety Notes for Bird Owners

  • Fipronil (Frontline) is toxic to birds. Never use flea or tick products designed for dogs or cats on birds.
  • Teflon / PTFE fumes are lethal. Overheated nonstick cookware releases fumes that cause acute respiratory death in birds. This is not medication-related but is the most common cause of sudden bird death in the home.
  • Calcium in food and water binds tetracyclines (including doxycycline), reducing absorption. Dietary calcium must be managed during doxycycline treatment courses.
  • Leg injections may be filtered by the kidneys due to the avian renal portal system, potentially reducing systemic drug levels.