Ivermectin Dosage Calculator for Dogs
Indication-specific ivermectin dosing for dogs — covering heartworm prevention, sarcoptic mange, demodicosis, and intestinal parasites, with critical MDR1/ABCB1 gene mutation breed safety screening built in.
MDR1/ABCB1 MUTATION WARNING — POTENTIALLY FATAL IN AFFECTED BREEDS. Collies, Shelties, Australian Shepherds, Border Collies, McNabs, English Sheepdogs, Long-haired Whippets, Silken Windhounds and crosses may carry the MDR1 (ABCB1-1Δ) deletion. These dogs cannot clear ivermectin from the CNS, causing fatal neurotoxicity at doses used for mange. GENETIC TESTING IS MANDATORY before using ivermectin off-label in these or mixed breeds. Heartgard doses (6 mcg/kg) are generally safe even in MDR1-affected dogs; high-dose protocols are NOT.
What Is Ivermectin?
Ivermectin is a macrocyclic lactone antiparasitic derived from Streptomyces avermitilis fermentation. It acts as a positive allosteric modulator of glutamate-gated chloride channels (GluCl) and GABA-A receptors in invertebrate nerve and muscle cells, causing hyperpolarisation, paralysis, and death of parasites. In mammals, these channels are normally excluded from the CNS by the blood-brain barrier P-glycoprotein efflux pump (ABCB1/MDR1). Dogs with the MDR1 deletion lack this pump, allowing ivermectin to accumulate in the CNS and cause severe neurological toxicity.
Pharmacokinetics in Dogs
- Oral bioavailability: ~95%; fat-containing food significantly increases absorption
- Half-life (dogs): ~1.5–2 days; effect persists beyond plasma half-life
- Peak plasma (oral): ~4 hours
- Metabolism: Hepatic CYP3A4; faecal elimination (~98%)
Dose Ranges by Indication
- Heartworm prevention (FDA-approved): 6–12 mcg/kg PO monthly (Heartgard, Iverhart) — safe in ALL breeds including MDR1
- Microfilaricidal (post-adulticidal): 50 mcg/kg PO once (with monitoring)
- Sarcoptic mange: 200–400 mcg/kg PO or SC q2 weeks × 3–4 treatments — REQUIRES MDR1 clearance
- Demodicosis (generalised): 300–600 mcg/kg PO q24h — REQUIRES MDR1 clearance; off-label use
- Intestinal parasites (roundworms, hookworms): 200 mcg/kg PO once
- Ear mites (Otodectes): 200–300 mcg/kg SC q2 weeks × 2
MDR1/ABCB1 Breed Risk Screening
Before using ivermectin at any dose higher than standard monthly heartworm prevention (≤12 mcg/kg), the dog’s MDR1 status must be known. The Washington State University (WSU) Veterinary Clinical Pharmacology Lab offers the gold-standard MDR1 genetic test.
| Breed | MDR1 Risk | Safe for HW Prevention? | Safe for High-Dose? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rough/Smooth Collie | ~70% affected | Yes (≤12 mcg/kg) | NO — test first |
| Shetland Sheepdog (Sheltie) | ~15% affected | Yes | NO — test first |
| Australian Shepherd | ~50% affected | Yes | NO — test first |
| Border Collie | ~5% affected | Yes | NO — test first |
| English Sheepdog (OES) | Low-moderate | Yes | NO — test first |
| Mixed breed (unknown ancestry) | Unknown | Yes | Test mandatory |
| Labrador, Golden, Beagle, etc. | Negligible | Yes | Generally safe |
How to Use This Calculator
- Select your dog’s breed or breed category — MDR1 safety flag will appear automatically
- Enter your dog’s body weight in kg or lbs
- Select the indication — dose range changes significantly by use
- Select the ivermectin product/concentration available
- Click Calculate to see dose in mcg, mg, and mL (for liquid formulations)
🧮 Ivermectin Dose Calculator
Ivermectin Dosing Result
Signs of Ivermectin Toxicity in Dogs
If a dog develops any of the following after ivermectin administration, treat as a veterinary emergency:
- Mydriasis (dilated pupils), ataxia (incoordination), tremors
- Hypersalivation, vomiting, lethargy progressing to stupor
- Blindness (transient or prolonged), disorientation
- Respiratory depression, coma — in severe cases
- Onset typically within 4–12 hours of ingestion; can persist for days to weeks in MDR1-affected dogs
Treatment: No specific antidote. Supportive care: GI decontamination if early, IV fluids, physostigmine (controversial), intralipid therapy (lipid emulsion 20%) — increasing evidence of benefit for lipophilic drug toxicity.
Frequently Asked Questions
References
- Plumb DC. Plumb’s Veterinary Drug Handbook, 9th ed. Wiley-Blackwell; 2018.
- Mealey KL, et al. Ivermectin sensitivity in collies is associated with a deletion mutation of the mdr1 gene. Pharmacogenetics. 2001;11(8):727-733.
- Mealey KL. Therapeutic implications of the MDR-1 gene. J Vet Pharmacol Ther. 2004;27(4):257-264.
- Papich MG. Saunders Handbook of Veterinary Drugs, 4th ed. Elsevier; 2016.
- Mueller RS. Treatment protocols for demodicosis: an evidence-based review. Vet Dermatol. 2004;15(2):75-89.
- Washington State University Veterinary Clinical Pharmacology Lab. MDR1 mutation testing. vetmed.wsu.edu; 2023.
