I remember several friends claiming that liquid bandaid was simply re-labeled cyanoacrolate glue, aka “super glue”. I never verified for myself, but I suspect they were at least half correct.
I've used liquid bandage, and like it as well, especially for tough to bandage places like fingernail edges.
That's a nice story about the ingredients in Liquid bandage, but no. Liquid bandage is a mix of nitrocellulose (the polymer and bandage material), amyl, ethyl, and butyl acetates (the distinctive odors and solvents), camphor (also distinctive odor), ethanol, plus usually some disinfectants, like benzethonium chloride.
All-in-One New-Skin Liquid Bandage is the ultimate solution when you need a flexible seal that protects cuts and scrapes, wounds, calluses, and dry, cracked skin.
newskinproducts.com
"...Amyl acetate, camphor, ethyl acetate, ethyl alcohol, n-butyl acetate, nitrocellulose"
Methylacrylate, aka superglue, is used medically to suture wounds, but it is a medical grade material (e.g. Dermabond), and some forms are biodegradable, so no need to open the patient up to remove internal sutures. Just be careful not to use it on jagged or dirty wounds when it can do more harm than good.
Mayo emphasizes the lack of sedation needed to care for wounds as an important driver of pediatric use.
I personally think bandage is preferable to superglue, but if the choice is superglue or nothing, I'd certainly seriously consider it.
I'm not an MD, but I have been in the back of beyond lots of times, and know first hand that when you need it, you need it.
All the best,
Peter