Understand the need
Start with the main challenge: comfort, hygiene, mobility, calmness, skin protection, feeding routine or safe activity.
Helpful products and plain-English guidance for supporting dogs with wound care. Choose practical care items that may help comfort, routine, safety and everyday wellbeing while keeping your vet involved for serious or persistent signs.
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Learn what to watch for, which product types are useful and how to build a safer routine without overbuying.
Wound Care support is about understanding your dog's needs, reducing avoidable strain or triggers, and choosing products that make home care easier. Always speak to your vet if signs are painful, serious, worsening or persistent.
Start with the main challenge: comfort, hygiene, mobility, calmness, skin protection, feeding routine or safe activity.
Useful products may help with everyday comfort and consistency when chosen for your dog's actual symptoms.
Products can support daily care, but they do not diagnose, cure or replace professional veterinary advice.
The best wound care setup is practical and specific: comfort, safety, hygiene, controlled activity, enrichment or vet-approved routine support.
Can be useful for everyday wound care care when it matches your dog's symptoms and your vet's advice.
Browse products →SupportCan be useful for everyday wound care care when it matches your dog's symptoms and your vet's advice.
Browse products →SupportCan be useful for everyday wound care care when it matches your dog's symptoms and your vet's advice.
Browse products →SupportCan be useful for everyday wound care care when it matches your dog's symptoms and your vet's advice.
Browse products →Wound Care signs can be mild, recurring or sudden. Products may help daily care, but worrying symptoms should always be discussed with your vet.
Contact a vet quickly for deep wounds, heavy bleeding, swelling, heat, discharge, bad smell, infection signs, worsening pain or wounds your dog will not leave alone.
Use these steps to make care calmer, safer and easier while avoiding products that do not match your dog's actual needs.
Notice comfort, appetite, energy, skin, toileting or movement before starting the day. Keep changes gentle and predictable.
Use simple home changes such as non-slip routes, calm rest areas, measured portions, protective aids or supervised exercise where relevant.
Clean, dry, rest and monitor. Contact your vet if symptoms are persistent, painful, worsening or worrying.
Calm first steps and when wounds need professional help.
Read guide →RehabProtecting healing skin and preventing licking after procedures.
Read guide →Essential careRed flags such as pain, swelling, bleeding or infection signs.
Read guide →Paws & limbsSmall wounds and injuries on paws can still need care.
Read guide →Simple answers to help you choose useful support while understanding where veterinary care is needed.
No. Products can support comfort, safety and daily care, but they do not cure, diagnose or replace veterinary treatment.
Start with the product that solves the biggest daily problem: comfort, grip, protection, hygiene, calmness, portion control or controlled movement.
Contact a vet quickly for deep wounds, heavy bleeding, swelling, heat, discharge, bad smell, infection signs, worsening pain or wounds your dog will not leave alone.
Not always. Supplements may help support general wellbeing in some dogs, but check with your vet if your dog has a medical condition, takes medication or needs a specific diet.