One of the problems, I think, in accurately quantifying these 'studies' is the
lack of controllable uniformity in what can be called "Traumatic Shock"
If we pull out the ol' microscope, and examine this term itself, we soon realize there is NO WAY to get a uniform sampling for error-free, controlled study.
There are simply too many variables, and I think this is why there have NOT been such controlled studies: there is no way TO control the damages.
It is one thing to purposely let 40% of the blood volume out of 2 groups of dogs, and get uniform, controlled studies like that, because of the ease in achieving uniformity of the challenge.
It is quite another to call all dog fights "the same," as they can involve an almost endless array of potential injuries/trauma ...
That last link that I posted has "hit by car, dog fights," etc. ... AS IF all dog fights are "the same" ... but ARE THEY?
I might have a dog that went 1.5 hours, and is "shocky," but he might have been
on the ear the whole time, almost never got bit, but became "shocky" just from a combination of fatigue, coming in dry, and having a bleeder hit at the :20 mark. When correctly assessed, he really isn't "injured" at all, but has merely
bled out and become too exhausted/dehydrated, to the point of shock.
On the other hand, I might have a second dog who
was in a brutal, non-stop WAR with another dog, been bit in the guts, deep in the throat, become
truly traumatized ... and is SWELLING BADLY in these deadly areas ...
Now then, both of these dogs were in "dog fights," per se, but yet each of them has had
drastically-different injury levels
The first dog, because he's dehydrated, we would
not use the Hypertonic Saline approach (as it's contra-indicated for dehydration), but we absolutely would want to give him ringers to restore lost fluids (a blood transfusion would be even better). Ideally, the first dog may well be able to be stabilized just fine
without the use of steroids at all, just ringers, or a transfusion, and maybe some antibiotics.
However, the second dog, with all that FLESH TRAUMA + SWELLING in his throat/windpipe/guts, you bet your ass I'd be running a massive dose of Solu-Medrol (or even dexamethosone sodium phosphate) into that dog, so he doesn't blow-up like a bullfrog in his throat. Therefore, here again, it becomes a judgment call on the part of the owner ... and having somewhat of an understanding of WHAT THESE DRUGS DO ... and analyzing EXACTLY WHAT'S WRONG WITH THE DOG ... become the keys to making the right choices.
As with tailoring a conditioning regimen around the dog's strengths/weaknesses, so too must the medic tailor his aftercare choices around
what has actually happened to his dog. To write a tiny paragraph about "trauma" and to lump all "dog fights" into one heading is shallow, at best. The truth is, it is absolutely MULTI-DIMENSIONAL what happens to any dog in a fight ... and each dog needs to be assessed individually as to what procedures should be followed, based on
what has actually happened to that dog.
Jack