Early treatment while the ulcer is superficial, is essential for survival. Relocate the affected animal to a hospital pen and provide a deep layer of dry absorbent sawdust. Sawdust provides padding, reduces friction and absorbs moisture and may help to prevent exacerbation of existing ulcers and development of new ones.
Treat ulcers similarly to any open wound - apply lavage, debridement and if on limbs, bandaging. The objectives are to keep pressure off the ulcer and allow healthy granulation tissue to rapidly fill in the ulcer.
Apply lavage using clean mildly salty water squirted under moderate pressure with a 35 mL syringe and 19g needle.
Apply debridement by cutting or scraping away necrotic tissue.
Apply topical antibiotic ointments or powders to help control surface infection, parenteral antibiotics (procaine penicillin, erythromycin, oxytetracycline, or tylosin) to control deep infection, and non-steroid anti-inflammatory drugs (flunixin meglumine, ketoprofen, meloxicam, or tolfenamic acid) to control pain and swelling.
Apply bandages that are close fitting, snug, long, firm and thick so they are like a cast. This can be achieved using rolls of gauze, cotton wool and elastic adhesive bandages. The objectives of bandaging are to stop bleeding, immobilise the area, prevent further trauma and contamination, keep the wound warm and prevent it drying out. Without bandaging, wound healing may be severely compromised.
An inexpensive, easily applied waterproof conforming bandage suitable for shipboard conditions can be made using rolls of plastic clingwrap, foam rubber and electrical or duct tape.
Encourage affected animals to stand as much as possible.