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Wound Healing – Part 3 of 3

August 24, 2017
cat in wounds

Read part 1 and part 2 of the Wound Healing blog series!

Human intervention, when needed:

If your pet’s wound is fresh and your pet will allow it, try to flush out large debris particles with tap water (saline flush as used for eyes is even better). Cover the wound with clean, dry bandage material, if possible. See your veterinarian for professional wound care as bandages can cut off circulation to a limb if applied incorrectly.

Non-healing Wounds

Some wounds may become chronic, either relapsing or never show signs of healing.  In this case, consult your veterinarian ASAP.  Non-healing wounds may have other underlying disease process involvement (ie, tumour) or may simply be infected or have antibiotic resistant bacteria.  This is common in human medicine but is becoming more commonplace amongst veterinary patients.  Do not try to do it yourself and end up with an advanced and possibly untreatable problem.

Referenced from https://www.vin.com/

Read part 1 and part 2 of the Wound Healing blog series!

Written by Dr. Alex Hare