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

Fish Medications & Health Conditions

Fish pharmacology differs from all other pet medicine in one fundamental way: you cannot dose an individual animal. Medications are added to the water column (bath treatment) or mixed into food — dosing is calculated per gallon of water, not per kilogram of body weight. Water chemistry, including pH, temperature, hardness, and organic load, directly affects how medications work. Activated carbon in aquarium filters will remove most medications and must be removed during treatment. Species sensitivity varies significantly — scaleless fish (loaches, catfish) are more sensitive to many treatments, and invertebrates (shrimp, snails, corals) can be killed by common fish medications. The regulatory landscape has also shifted, with several antibiotics previously available over the counter now requiring veterinary prescriptions following FDA enforcement actions.

This information is for educational purposes only. Water quality is the foundation of fish health — test your water parameters before and during any treatment.

Common Conditions in Aquarium Fish

Most aquarium fish diseases are triggered or worsened by poor water quality — ammonia and nitrite spikes, temperature fluctuations, or overcrowding. Addressing the root cause alongside medication is essential for successful treatment.

Common Medications for Fish

Fish medications are primarily available as water-soluble powders, liquids, or medicated food. Many familiar brand names (Kanaplex, Metroplex, Ich-X) are manufactured specifically for aquarium use.

Antiparasitic

Antibacterial

Antifungal

Supportive & General

Fish Medication Reference

Product Active Ingredient Primary Use Key Notes
Kanaplex Kanamycin Fin rot, dropsy, septicemia Absorbed through gills; can dose in water or food
Metroplex Metronidazole Ich, Hexamita, hole-in-head Effective against anaerobic bacteria and protozoa
PraziPro Praziquantel Flukes, tapeworms, planaria Reef-safe; invertebrate-safe
Ich-X Formalin + malachite green Ich, velvet Half-dose for scaleless fish
API Erythromycin Erythromycin Gram-positive bacteria, cyanobacteria Can crash beneficial bacteria in filter
Seachem Focus Binding agent Binds medications to food Mix with Kanaplex or Metroplex for food dosing

Important Notes for Fish Keepers

  • Water quality is the first treatment. Test ammonia, nitrite, nitrate, and pH before reaching for medication. Many mild cases of fin rot and fungal infection resolve with water changes alone.
  • Remove activated carbon during treatment. Carbon will absorb medications from the water, rendering them ineffective.
  • Scaleless fish require reduced doses. Loaches, catfish, and other scaleless species are more sensitive to most medications. Follow half-dose guidelines when applicable.
  • Invertebrates are at risk. Copper-based treatments are lethal to shrimp, snails, and corals. Use a hospital tank or choose invertebrate-safe medications.
  • Treat for the full lifecycle. Ich, for example, can only be killed in its free-swimming stage. Treatment must continue for 7-14 days to cover the full parasite lifecycle.
  • Regulatory changes affect availability. Several aquarium antibiotics (amoxicillin, cephalexin, ciprofloxacin, metronidazole) previously sold over the counter now require veterinary prescriptions following FDA enforcement actions.