Dog Foot Pad Bandaging: What Worked Best for Cookie’s Plantar Paw Pad Cut

Dog paw pads take a lot of abuse. This makes them difficult to bandage and get any wounds to heal.

We did manage to get Cookie’s plantar paw pad cut to heal without any complications, though. During that time, I have received quite a crash course in bandaging.

Dog Foot Pad Bandaging: What Worked Best for Cookie's Plantar Paw Pad Cut

What worked best

This was our first experience with bandaging.

Despite all the health issues and injuries we’ve been through with our dogs, we never had to bandage anything ourselves until now.

Cookie has cut her plantar paw pad

To keep the wound closed and clean, we decided to put on a bandage for each of our walks (not going for walks is not an option with a fireball such as Cookie).

Letting the wound breathe

While at home, we leave it uncovered so it can breathe and stay dry. Bandages on dogs are a tricky business and can get dangerous if left on and have a chance to get wet and become a breeding ground for bacteria.

So we only bandaged it for going outside, removed it when we returned and cleaned the foot with betadine solution.

Booties were suggested, but here is the thing: with the level of energy Cookie has and the way she flies through the challenging terrain, we don’t want her to end up more hurt. We didn’t want to mess with her normal gait. A cut paw pad is better than a broken leg.

Even when bandaging, we came up with a way to protect the plantar pad but leave the digits free.

What I look for in a bandage

Here is what we’ve learned to look for in a bandage:

1. We definitely and absolutely want one that is STRETCHY.

It helps to conform to the contours of the foot and leg, helps to keep it tighter without being too tight, and stays on much better.

This morning we ran out of that one and tried a regular gauze bandage. But, unfortunately, it was a total dressing failure. It did not stay on properly at all, and Cookie managed to step on something right after it came off and aggravated her wound.

Regular stretchy gauze bandage worked quite well but did require a sticky one over it, as we learned after this one eventually unraveled.
2. Self-adhesive is a bonus

For some dumb reason, I was vet wrap shy at first, probably because we didn’t have narrow enough ones, just really wide ones.

We did have a package of stretchy gauze bandages, so that’s what we started with. On our first attempt, we dressed the wound and tied the end of the gauze around. It held on reasonably well but did come off eventually. We then got some sticky medical tape to go over that to hold it on. That worked quite well and can do just fine, actually.

It wasn’t until we ran out of that one when I finally worked up the chops to use the wide vet wrap we did have. It seems pretty dumb now, after seeing how great that one worked. Self-adhesive is ideal.

Side note: It seems to hold better when you don’t stretch the final “loop” too much and also having it end on the top of the foot rather than on the bottom.

Cookie’s vet wrap dressing AFTER an hour and a half of zoomies!
3. Water-proof?

That probably would be perfect, but we don’t have one of those (the vet wrap is just semi-watertight). We ordered some, though. Stretchy, self-adhesive, and water-proof.

Because we got clean snow out here, no mud and no water, and sub-zero temperatures, we didn’t worry about this feature too much, mainly because we don’t leave the dressing on. But it does get wet in the snow.

Vet wrap

The best results we have had so far are with vet wrap. 

Other than not being waterproof, it works beautifully. Conforms to Cookie’s foot and stayed on even through an hour and a half of zoomies. And we took it off quite easily. It didn’t even require any cutting. It just unwrapped.

If you cannot get vet wrap, Johnson & Johnson Hospital Grade Hurt-Free Kling Design tape or Rexall Pain-Free “Stick-to-itself” tape are pretty much the same thing and work well too.

As a side note, make sure you have small round-nosed scissors in your first-aid kit, too, just in case you need to cut your dressing to remove it.

Make sure you do have vet wrap (or a bandage with similar features) of VARIOUS WIDTHS in your dog’s first-aid kit.

And if you’re out camping or on holidays in a remote area, do make sure you have a whole bunch of them. We ran out the good stuff very quickly, and around here, it’s not just a question of running down the road to get more.

As one more side note, we apply some liquid vitamin E from a gel before dressing to make sure the bandage doesn’t stick to the wound. And while using the vet wrap, we also applied a little gauze pad over the wound before wrapping.

Related articles:
Dog Wound Care: Scissor-Free Bandaging
Cookie’s Plantar Paw Pad Injury
Caring for JD’s Wounds

Further reading:
Dog Paw Cuts and Scrapes: How to Treat a Paw Injury

Categories: ConditionsDog careInjuriesWound careWounds

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Jana Rade

I am a graphic designer, dog health advocate, writer, and author. Jasmine, the Rottweiler of my life, was the largest female from her litter. We thought we were getting a healthy dog. Getting a puppy from a backyard breeder was our first mistake. Countless veterinary visits without a diagnosis or useful treatment later, I realized that I had to take Jasmine's health care in my own hands. I learned the hard way that merely seeing a vet is not always enough. There is more to finding a good vet than finding the closest clinic down the street. And, sadly, there is more to advocating for your dog's health than visiting a veterinarian. It should be enough, but it often is not. With Jasmine, it took five years to get a diagnosis. Unfortunately, other problems had snowballed for that in the meantime. Jasmine's health challenges became a crash course in understanding dog health issues and how to go about getting a proper diagnosis and treatment. I had to learn, and I had to learn fast. Helping others through my challenges and experience has become my mission and Jasmine's legacy. I now try to help people how to recognize and understand signs of illness in their dogs, how to work with their veterinarian, and when to seek a second opinion. My goal is to save others the steep curve of having to learn things the hard way as I did. That is the mission behind my blog and behind my writing. That is why I wrote Symptoms to Watch for in Your Dog, which has turned out being an award-winning guide to dog owners. What I'm trying to share encompasses 20 years of experience.

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