I prefer to cut away the dead sections, or any section that seems to be afflicted to the point where leaf buds may struggle to emerge in order to improve the flow of energy in the culm, and expose more sunlight to the existing leaves. This way, the a lot of locked up energy which is going towards half dead parts can be allocated to new shoots as well as the other live buds on the same culm. I prefer the bamboo to not allocate energy to parts that would struggle to thrive.
Here's what I'm talking about.
Before
After
If leaf buds appear fried on a certain section while the culm still appears alive, I think it's best to cut off the branches and leave the culm section alone.
I like doing this for the aesthetics as well, but I believe this kind of pruning can help the bamboo in its overall health.
For the ones that are really top killed close to the ground, I think it would make sense to wait a few weeks later until it becomes more clear which sections are dead and what is still alive. For example, I think it would make sense to top these above their 2nd or 3rd node before shooting season to make room for more growth. This is my worst looking bamboo by the way.
