Coccidiosis treatment options
An educational overview of how coccidiosis is managed in animals — the anti-coccidial drug classes (toltrazuril, amprolium, sulfonamides, diclazuril), supportive care, and a dosage reference. Not veterinary advice.
Treating coccidiosis has two parts: a specific anti-coccidial drug to stop the parasite, and supportive care to help the animal recover. The right drug depends heavily on the species, so match the medication to your animal — and always confirm the choice, dose, and course with a veterinarian.
The main anti-coccidial drugs
Toltrazuril single dose
A triazine compound that veterinary references describe as acting on multiple intracellular stages of coccidia, which is why it is often given as a single oral dose. It is discussed in the literature for goats, sheep, piglets, and other species. Note: toltrazuril is not FDA-approved for use in animals in the United States; where it is used, it must be prescribed and supervised by a licensed veterinarian.
Amprolium multi-day course
A long-established drug that works by mimicking thiamine (vitamin B1), a nutrient the parasite needs. Certain amprolium products are FDA-approved for coccidiosis in cattle and poultry, given over several days for treatment or longer for prevention; use in other species is extra-label and requires a veterinarian. Because it affects thiamine, references advise vitamin B1 supplementation afterward.
Sulfonamides (sulfadimethoxine) companion animals
Sulfa drugs such as sulfadimethoxine are the traditional treatment for dogs and cats, given as a loading dose followed by a lower daily dose for several days.
Diclazuril single/repeat
Another triazine coccidiostat, often given as a single dose (sometimes repeated) and used in small ruminants, rabbits, and poultry.
Drug at a glance
| Drug | Typical use | Course |
|---|---|---|
| Toltrazuril | Goats, sheep, piglets, rabbits | Usually single dose |
| Amprolium | Cattle, poultry | ~5 days (treat) / longer (prevent) |
| Sulfadimethoxine | Dogs, cats | Several days |
| Diclazuril | Small ruminants, rabbits, poultry | Single / repeated |
Supportive care
Drugs stop the parasite, but supportive care keeps the animal alive while the gut heals:
- Fluids & electrolytes — the single most important treatment for scouring young animals; replaces what diarrhea takes.
- Nutrition — easily digestible food and, for nursing animals, continued access to milk.
- Warmth and rest — sick, dehydrated animals struggle to stay warm.
- Isolation — separating affected animals limits spread and contamination.
Estimate a dose
Use the calculator below for a reference dose based on published label and veterinary figures, then confirm it with your veterinarian and the product label before treating.
Common treatment mistakes
- Stopping early. With multi-day drugs, quitting when the animal "looks better" lets the infection rebound.
- Using a dewormer. Coccidia aren't worms — dewormers won't touch them.
- Ignoring the environment. Treating the animal but not cleaning the pen guarantees reinfection.
- Skipping the vet. Wrong drug or dose wastes time while a young animal declines.