Things You'll Need
- Scissor-style dog nail clippers
- Nail file
Instructions
Restrain the dog with your body before clipping any nails, unless the dog willingly sits and waits for its nails to be clipped. This is done by setting the dog on a table and covering the animal with your upper body so that your clipping, or dominant, arm reaches over the dog's body to the paw on the other side. Meanwhile, your non-dominant forearm should sit over the dog's neck to prevent it from raising its head and to hold the paw. If the dog squirms too much, try laying it on its side so that your body passes over the dog in the same way to hold it down and the paws face away from you.
Hold the dew claw away from the leg enough to clip it. If the claw is dark-colored, the "quick" inside the claw is not visible and the trimming must be done in several very small clips. The quick is a center of nerves and blood vessels and can cause the dog pain if clipped. On a light claw, the discoloration of the quick is visible, but on a claw where this center is not visible, take small clips until the end of the claw shows a gray or pink oblong area instead of the separated nail and under-nail tissue colors. Stop at this point to avoid cutting the quick.
File the end of the claw to remove sharp irregularities.
Remove small amounts of nail on greatly overgrown dew claws since the quick expands on overgrown claws. With regular trimming, the quick will recede and allow the nail to remain clipped short.
Remove the dew claw entirely, with its skin attachment, or toe. This option may make sense for an overgrown claw that is infected or that often gets stuck on objects in the dog's environment, and is an operation that a veterinarian must perform.