Kruuse Gauze Elastic Bandage White 4 m for Dogs & Cats
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Kruuse gauze elastic bandage is a stretch gauze roll that combines the softness and breathability of gauze with added elasticity for improved conforming ability around limbs and joints. This makes it particularly suitable for wound dressings on irregularly shaped body areas where standard non-stretch gauze tends to bunch or gap.
Available in 6 cm and 8 cm widths, each in 4 m rolls in boxes of 20 — clinic-volume quantity for facilities managing ongoing wound cases. The white colour provides a clean, professional appearance for post-surgical and wound care applications.
What widths are available?
6 cm and 8 cm, both in 4 m rolls (box of 20).
Every component of a wound care dressing system matters — from the wound contact layer to the outer fixation layer. Using professional-grade supplies designed for veterinary use ensures consistent performance, appropriate material safety, and compatibility with the other components of the dressing system. Home-use or hardware store substitutes may seem interchangeable but often lack the softness, sterility standards, or material specifications required for safe wound care.
VivoPet sources wound care supplies from the same professional veterinary distributors that supply Canadian veterinary hospitals. This means the products available here are the same items your veterinarian uses in clinic — not consumer-market approximations of professional supplies. If your veterinarian has recommended a specific wound care protocol, the supplies available at VivoPet allow you to follow that protocol consistently at home between clinic visits.
Wound healing is a complex biological process that depends not just on the dressing materials used, but on consistent dressing change frequency, appropriate wound cleaning technique, and timely identification of complications like infection or dressing-related pressure injury. If a wound is not showing visible improvement after 5-7 days of home wound care, or if you observe increasing redness, swelling, warmth, or discharge, consult your veterinarian before continuing home management. Early identification of complications prevents minor issues from becoming major setbacks in the healing process.