When you find that a part of your dog is injured or bleeding, you should clean the dog's wound as soon as possible. First, you need to confirm that there is no foreign object in the wound and squeeze out the blood from the wound while rinsing it with clean water. For larger wounds, you can rinse them with light salt water, which will not irritate the wound and will be gentler.
After cleaning the wound, you can apply medicine to prevent inflammation and infection on your dog's wound. If the hair around the wound is thick, you can cut it off appropriately to let the wound be exposed, which will be much more convenient when applying medicine.
This is very important. A dog will lick the wound when it is wounded. It will isolate the wound so that it cannot lick it, which can make the wound heal faster. Some simple bandaging measures can be taken to tie up the wound with gauze.
After completing the above tasks, one more job you need to do is to observe whether there is redness, swelling or suppuration in the dog's wounds and around the wounds every day.
The wound is normal and the pores around the skin should not gradually become scabbed in the wound, the scabs fall off and new fine hairs grow. Moreover, dog wounds heal very quickly, so if everything is normal, small wounds should heal quickly.