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If a puppy has torn or otherwise injured the dewclaws before that time, it’s certainly worth discussing their permanent removal to prevent reinjury. If dewclaws aren’t removed in the days after birth, the next opportunity is typically at the same time as a spay or neuter. (Some breeders remove declaws themselves, but this is a task more appropriately handled by a veterinarian.) In others, it’s done to prevent possible injuries, such as being damaged while a hunting dog works through brambles. While in some breeds, the removal is thought to improve the appearance of the show ring. In many breeds - but certainly, not all - the dewclaw has traditionally been removed in the first few days of a dog’s life. They are attached to the carpus by a separate metacarpal bone, forming an actual joint with the carpus. Front dewclaws are a normal part of a dog’s anatomy. There is no valid medical reason for front dewclaw removal and even removal of well-developed rear dewclaws unless there’s a diseased dewclaw or dewclaw injury. Rear dewclaws are considered an anomaly except in a few breeds where single or double well-developed rear dewclaws are parts of the breed, such as the Briard or Great Pyrenees. Rear dewclaws: Some dogs are born with 1, 2, or even double dewclaws on the rear legs.Front dewclaws: All dogs are born with a dewclaw on each front leg.When a dog has extra dewclaws in addition to the usual one on each front leg, the dog is said to be double dewclaws. At least one of these dewclaws will be poorly connected to the leg, and in this case, it is often surgically removed.