๐Ÿ“… May 2026 ๐Ÿ• 13 min read ๐Ÿท๏ธ Health ยท Food Reviews

Are Flea & Tick Medications Actually Safe for Your Dog?

NexGard, Simparica, Bravecto โ€” millions of dogs take them monthly. They work by targeting the nervous system. The FDA issued a safety warning. And for certain breeds, the risk is far higher than most owners realise.

โšก Quick Answer

For most healthy dogs, isoxazoline flea medications are generally safe and highly effective. But the FDA issued a formal neurological warning in 2018, adverse events do occur, and dogs carrying the MDR1 gene mutation โ€” especially Collies, Australian Shepherds and Shelties โ€” face significantly higher risk. Every dog owner should know this before giving the next chew.

How Do These Drugs Actually Work?

NexGard (afoxolaner), Simparica (sarolaner), Bravecto (fluralaner) and Credelio (lotilaner) all belong to a class called isoxazolines. When a flea or tick bites your dog, it ingests the drug in your dog's blood. The drug then blocks two types of chloride channels in the parasite's nervous system โ€” GABA-gated and glutamate-gated channels โ€” causing uncontrolled electrical firing until the parasite dies.

The key claim from manufacturers is selective toxicity: invertebrates (insects, ticks) have different receptor subtypes than mammals, so the drug targets parasites while leaving your dog relatively unaffected. This is largely true โ€” but as we'll see, not perfectly true.

99.3%
NexGard flea kill rate within 24 hours [FDA]
2018
Year FDA issued neurological safety warning for all isoxazoline products
~75%
of Rough Collies carry the MDR1 gene mutation that raises their risk

The FDA Warning You Probably Never Heard About

In September 2018, the US Food & Drug Administration issued a formal alert requiring all isoxazoline flea and tick products to update their labels with a neurological adverse events warning. The reported reactions included:

โš ๏ธ FDA's Official Statement (2018)

"The FDA is alerting pet owners and veterinarians to be aware of the potential for neurological adverse events in dogs and cats when treated with drugs that are in the isoxazoline class."

โ†’ Read the FDA Fact Sheet on Isoxazoline Adverse Events

This doesn't mean these drugs are dangerous for most dogs โ€” the majority tolerate them without issue. But it does mean the "completely safe" narrative isn't quite accurate. Adverse reactions are rare, but they are real and documented.

The Gene Mutation That Changes Everything

This is the part most owners โ€” and some vets โ€” don't know about. A gene called MDR1 (also called ABCB1) controls a pump that removes certain drugs from the brain. Dogs with a mutation in this gene cannot clear drugs like moxidectin (found in Simparica Trio) efficiently from their brains, leading to toxic accumulation and severe neurological reactions โ€” even at standard label doses.

Washington State University's Veterinary Clinical Pharmacology Lab has been researching this mutation for over two decades. Their testing programme shows the following prevalence in herding and related breeds:

MDR1 Gene Mutation Prevalence by Breed (% of dogs carrying at least one copy)

Rough Collie
Rough Collie
~75%
Long-haired Whippet
Long-haired Whippet
~65%
Australian Shepherd
Aus. Shepherd
~50%
Mini Aus. Shepherd
Mini Aus. Shepherd
~50%
Shetland Sheepdog
Sheltie
~15%
German Shepherd
GSD
~10%
Border Collie
Border Collie
~10%
Old English Sheepdog
OES
~5%
Pembroke Welsh Corgi
Corgi
~5%
High risk (>40%) Moderate risk (10โ€“40%) Lower risk (<10%)

Source: Washington State University Veterinary Clinical Pharmacology Lab

๐Ÿ’ก What this means practically โ€” wherever you are in the world

If you own any of the breeds above, ask your vet about MDR1 genetic testing before starting any isoxazoline medication โ€” especially Simparica Trio (which also contains moxidectin). Testing is done from a simple cheek swab and costs around US$70โ€“100 or local equivalent. Labs that offer it:

Note: European regulators (EMA) and the UK's VMD have also issued updated label warnings for all isoxazoline products โ€” this is not a US-only concern. EMA NexGard EPAR โ†’

What About Natural Alternatives? The Honest Evidence

You'll find dozens of natural flea remedies suggested online โ€” garlic, neem oil, apple cider vinegar, essential oils, diatomaceous earth. The appeal is obvious: no FDA warnings, no synthetic chemicals. But the evidence behind these varies enormously. Here's what the research actually shows:

๐ŸŒฟ Neem Oil

Evidence: Moderate. Neem contains azadirachtin, a compound that disrupts insect hormone systems and acts as a repellent. Multiple peer-reviewed studies show repellent and mild acaricidal activity against ticks and fleas. It won't kill a heavy infestation but may help as a topical spray in a low-pressure environment. Diluted in a carrier oil, it's generally safe on dog skin โ€” but avoid the eyes and mucous membranes. PubMed search โ†’

๐Ÿชจ Food-Grade Diatomaceous Earth (DE)

Evidence: Effective as an environmental treatment โ€” not reliable on dogs. DE is a powder made from fossilised algae (diatoms) that physically damages flea and tick exoskeletons, causing them to dehydrate. A 2021 review in Molecules confirmed DE has genuine activity against Ixodida (ticks and fleas) and other arthropod pests โ€” particularly in dry indoor environments like carpets, dog bedding, and floor cracks. On a dog's coat, it loses efficacy when damp and raises inhalation concerns with the fine silica dust. Best used as an environmental treatment between washes, not applied directly to the dog. Review study โ†’

๐ŸŒฟ Essential Oils โ€” Fleas and Ticks

Evidence: Promising for fleas; modest for ticks. A 2025 critical review of 25 studies (published in Insects) found that essential oils from cinnamon (Cinnamomum spp.), clove (Syzygium aromaticum, active compound: eugenol), and sweet basil showed the most pronounced insecticidal and repellent effects against the cat flea (Ctenocephalides felis). For tick repellency, a separate study found geraniol (from rose geranium and lily-of-the-valley oil) showed activity comparable to low-dose DEET against Ixodes ricinus in lab conditions. All essential oils require frequent reapplication and work best in low-pressure environments only. โš ๏ธ Safety warning: not all essential oils are safe for dogs โ€” tea tree oil and pennyroyal are toxic. Cinnamon and clove oils must be heavily diluted before any skin contact, as undiluted concentrations cause burns and mucous membrane irritation. EO review (fleas) โ†’  Geraniol study (ticks) โ†’

๐Ÿง„ Garlic โ€” Why We're Including It Here

Garlic is one of the most frequently suggested natural flea remedies in online dog communities, based on the idea that it makes a dog's blood smell or taste unpleasant to fleas. We're including it in the comparison table below because so many owners have tried it or asked about it. But here's what the science says:

๐Ÿชฎ Flea Combing + Environmental Hygiene

Evidence: Genuinely effective as a complement. Daily flea combing (especially around the neck, base of the tail and groin) doesn't prevent fleas but catches infestations early. Combined with weekly vacuuming of carpets and floors, and washing bedding on a hot cycle, this significantly reduces flea burden. In very low-risk environments โ€” indoor urban dogs with minimal outdoor exposure โ€” this mechanical approach alone may be sufficient.

Honest Risk vs Benefit Comparison

Garlic is included here because it is one of the most widely suggested "natural" options online โ€” see the section above for the full explanation.

Option Flea/Tick Efficacy Risk to Dog Best For
Isoxazolines
NexGard, Simparica, Bravecto
โœ… Very high (99%+) โš ๏ธ Low for most; higher for MDR1 breeds High tick/flea pressure areas; most breeds
Older spot-ons
Frontline, Advantage
๐ŸŸก Moderate (declining resistance) โœ… Lower neurological risk Dogs with seizure history or MDR1 mutations
Natural alternatives
Diatomaceous earth, neem, cedar
โŒ Low โ€” not clinically proven โœ… Minimal toxicity risk Low-risk environments; as a complement only
Garlic โŒ No evidence it works โŒ Real risk of hemolytic anaemia Not recommended
No prevention โŒ None โŒ High risk of tick-borne disease (Lyme, Ehrlichia, Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever) Only very low-risk indoor dogs

The Bottom Line

Isoxazoline flea and tick medications are effective and generally safe โ€” but "generally safe" is doing a lot of work in that sentence. The FDA warning is real. Adverse neurological events do occur. And for Collies, Australian Shepherds and other herding breeds with the MDR1 mutation, the risk calculation is genuinely different.

This isn't an argument against using these medications. Tick-borne diseases like Lyme, Ehrlichia and Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever are serious and sometimes fatal โ€” the disease risk in a tick-heavy area almost certainly outweighs the drug risk for most dogs. But it is an argument for being an informed owner rather than just accepting a monthly chew as automatically safe.

Three things worth doing:

  1. If you own a herding breed, ask your vet about MDR1 testing before starting isoxazolines
  2. If your dog has a history of seizures or neurological issues, discuss alternatives with your vet
  3. If you see tremors, wobbling or unusual behaviour after starting a new flea medication, contact your vet immediately and mention the drug

๐Ÿ• What Are You Feeding Your Dog?

A strong immune system starts with the right diet. Our breed-specific guides show you exactly how to feed your dog for long-term health.

Find Your Breed Guide โ†’

๐Ÿ“š Sources & Further Reading

  1. FDA (2018). Fact Sheet: Potential Adverse Events Associated with Isoxazoline Flea and Tick Products. fda.gov โ†’
  2. European Medicines Agency. NexGard EPAR โ€” veterinary assessment. ema.europa.eu โ†’
  3. Washington State University Veterinary Clinical Pharmacology Lab. MDR1 Gene Mutation in Dogs. vcpl.vetmed.wsu.edu โ†’
  4. Mealey, K.L. et al. (2001). Ivermectin sensitivity in collies is associated with a deletion mutation of the mdr1 gene. Pharmacogenetics, 11(8):727โ€“733. PubMed โ†’
  5. Shoop, W.L. et al. (2014). Anthelmintic, acaricidal and flea activity of afoxolaner (NexGard). Parasites & Vectors. Parasites & Vectors โ†’
  6. Dumont, P. et al. (2014). NexGard: afoxolaner, a new oral insecticide-acaricide for dogs. Veterinary Parasitology, 201(3โ€“4):179โ€“186. PubMed โ†’
  7. Jaenson, T.G. et al. (2005). Repelling properties of some plant materials (including geraniol) on the tick Ixodes ricinus. Experimental and Applied Acarology. PubMed โ†’
  8. Cid, Y.P. et al. (2025). Essential Oils and Bioproducts for Flea Control: A Critical Review. Insects, 16(12):1276. MDPI โ†’
  9. Athanassiou, C.G. et al. (2021). Diatomaceous Earth for Arthropod Pest Control: Back to the Future. Molecules, 26(24):7487. PMC โ†’
  10. Yamato, O. et al. (2005). Heinz body haemolytic anaemia from Allium species ingestion in dogs. J Small Animal Practice. PubMed search โ†’
  11. Abdel-Ghaffar, F. et al. (2012). Efficacy of neem seed extract against ticks, lice and fleas. Parasitology Research. PubMed search โ†’