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Friction Burns
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Friction burns usually occur if your pet is dragged through the carpet or if they fall out of a car and tumble across pavement. It usually is scraping of skin and possibly deeper tissues. They can cover a large area on your pet. This will cause them to be painful and heal very slowly. Watch for infection and get your pet to the vet immediately especially if the burn is deep or covers more than 5-10% of their body.

Symptoms

Steps
1   Place your cat in a tub and flood the area with gently running cool to lukewarm water for 5 - 10 min to flush away any grit and reduce pain and swelling
2   Remove any large debris with blunt tipped tweezers.
3   It is best to leave burns uncovered but you may cover it if your cat is getting it dirty or licking it.
4   Check and flush the burned areas with cool water twice a day.
5   If any worsening occurs, seek veterinary care.
Warnings
If the friction burn involves more than 5%-10% of the body take your cat to the vet immediately
If your cat is going to shock avoid any cool water and go to the vet immediately
If the friction burn is on the head or neck make sure to remove your cats collar
Tips
If you cat won’t stay calm while removing debris with the tweezers let a vet take care of it
Keep bandages dry when your cat goes outside by wrapping it with saran wrap
If she is in shock you will notice her act woozy, weak, eyelids droop, pale tongue or gums, rapid beating, and collapse

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