Information from public internet sources. Always consult your veterinarian. In a true emergency, call ahead and drive to the ER.
- Frenchies in respiratory distress: 15-minute window before brachycephalic panic-breathing โ secondary emergency
- Bite wounds: 6 hours before bacterial colonization becomes infection
Step 1 โ DO NOT REACH IN WITH HANDS
Redirected aggression bites peak in this exact moment. Even your own dog will bite you in adrenaline.
Central California SPCA, AKC, Whole Dog Journal: hands between fighting dogs = guaranteed ER visit.
Step 2 โ Break Attention With Sound or Water FIRST
- Air horn (most effective per doggie daycare studies โ many dogs drop instantly)
- Water hose / bucket to face โ can be effective; reliability varies
- Citronella spray directly into nose/mouth of biting dog โ taste/smell forces release
- Loud object dropped near them (metal bowl, chair) for psychological break
Step 3 โ Wheelbarrow Technique (TWO PEOPLE)
Each handler grabs the BACK LEGS near the feet of THEIR dog. Lifts off the ground. Walks BACKWARDS in a circular motion.
- Circling prevents twist-bite to your hands
- NEVER grab collar or scruff โ that's where redirected bites happen
Step 4 โ Once Separated, Restrain Immediately
Leash, crate, or car. Do not allow re-engagement.
After Separation โ Wound Assessment
- Apply pressure first with clean cloth โ 5-10 min solid pressure stops most bleeding
- DO NOT panic-clean โ pressure before water
- Look for puncture wounds โ close over within minutes, look like "just a scratch." VCA: small canine punctures "can close over rapidly and easily be missed."
- Cover with clean damp cloth, transport to vet
Why Frenchies Are Particularly Vulnerable
- Small size (8-13 kg) โ single shake = spinal/internal injury risk
- Brachycephalic anatomy โ panicked breathing during attack triggers BOAS crisis. 50% of Frenchies have clinically significant BOAS at baseline; stress amplifies it.
- Spinal vulnerability โ studies report 79-97% of Frenchies have some form of spinal abnormality, depending on study and definition. Shake-trauma = severe risk.
- Eye proptosis risk โ even minor head trauma during an attack can pop the eye out.
Why Vet ALWAYS โ Bite Wound Infection
Dog mouth flora is polymicrobial:
- 50% Pasteurella (canis/multocida)
- Streptococcus, Staphylococcus, Fusobacterium, Bacteroides, Capnocytophaga
- Anaerobic bacteria thrive in puncture wounds โ canine teeth inject bacteria DEEP, skin closes over โ anaerobic chamber
Standard veterinary protocol:
- Surgical enlargement of the puncture for drainage
- Dilute antiseptic lavage
- Broad-spectrum antibiotics covering Pasteurella + anaerobes (typically amoxicillin-clavulanate, or doxycycline + metronidazole) โ vet-prescribed
ER vs. Regular Vet
ER NOW
- Uncontrollable bleeding
- Breathing difficulty (especially Frenchie!)
- Pale/blue gums
- Collapse
- Eye injury
- Abdominal/chest punctures
- Unconscious
Regular vet within 6 hours
- Any puncture
- Any bite that broke skin
- Even "just a scratch" from another dog
Legal & Evidence
- Photograph everything โ wounds (with ruler/coin for scale), location, the other dog, owner ID
- File animal control report within 24h (most jurisdictions require)
- Dangerous Dog Laws vary: registration, muzzling in public, mandatory confinement, liability for medical bills
- Keep all vet receipts โ civil claim window in most US states is 2-3 years
Emotional Aftermath (PTSD in Dogs Is Real)
Behavioral changes after attack:
- Trembling on walks
- Refusal to leave home
- Leash reactivity to ALL dogs
- Hypervigilance
- Sleep disturbance
Recovery:
- Gradual desensitization (parked car at distance from a friend's calm dog)
- Classical counterconditioning (high-value food at sight of dogs)
- Severe cases: vet behaviorist + fluoxetine/trazodone (vet-prescribed)
Prevention
- Skip dog parks entirely (Frenchie owner consensus is overwhelming on this)
- 6-foot leash, never flexi-leash
- Read body language: stiff tail, hard stare, raised hackles, lip-curl = walk away NOW
- Carry: air horn, citronella spray, treats for distraction
๐ Sources & References
- How to Break Up a Dog Fight Safely โ Whole Dog Journal. Whole-Dog-Journal.com
- Bite Wounds in Dogs โ VCA Hospitals. VCAhospitals.com
- Pasteurella canis dog bite infection. PMC5011120
- Animal Bites StatPearls (NCBI). NCBI.nlm.nih.gov
- Pug & French Bulldog Health Issues โ Humane World. HumaneWorld.org
โ ๏ธ Disclaimer
This page is educational only. We are not veterinarians. Information from publicly available internet sources.
Nothing on this website replaces a veterinary consultation.- Never give your dog medication without veterinary approval.
- After ANY dog attack โ go to a vet, even for tiny punctures.
- If breathing or bleeding is bad, call ahead and drive to the ER.