Analyze Diet

Topic:Body Mass

Body mass in horses refers to the total weight of an individual horse, which is an important parameter in equine health and management. It influences various aspects of a horse's physiology, including metabolism, locomotion, and overall health status. Accurate assessment of body mass is essential for determining appropriate feeding regimens, medication dosages, and for evaluating growth and development in young horses. Body mass can be measured directly using scales or estimated using body condition scoring systems and weight tapes. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the methods for assessing body mass, its impact on equine health and performance, and its role in the management of different horse breeds and disciplines.
[Nutrition of horses with equine pituitary pars intermedia dysfunction (“Cushing’s syndrome”) treated with pergolid – A field study].
Tierarztliche Praxis. Ausgabe G, Grosstiere/Nutztiere    August 24, 2018   Volume 46, Issue 4 249-256 doi: 10.15653/tpg-170574
Kienzle E, Bockhorni T.The nutritional status of 36 patients with equine pituitary pars intermedia dysfunction (PPID) under pergolide treatment was investigated. Methods: The body condi tion score (BCS) and feeding were determined at the beginning of the study and after 60 and 120 days. Sampled blood for control of pergolid therapy were used for insulin and glucose measurement. A standardized questionnaire regarding the symptoms of the disease, including hypertrichosis and weight change, was completed by the owners. Results: The mean BCS (scale of 1 = cachexia to 9 = grossly obese) was 3.1 ± 0.8 (large horses 2.7 Â...
Male Flat Jockeys Do Not Display Deteriorations in Bone Density or Resting Metabolic Rate in Accordance With Race Riding Experience: Implications for RED-S.
International journal of sport nutrition and exercise metabolism    June 22, 2018   Volume 28, Issue 4 434-439 doi: 10.1123/ijsnem.2017-0371
Wilson G, Martin D, Morton JP, Close GL.Despite consistent reports of poor bone health in male jockeys, it is not yet known if this is a consequence of low energy availability or lack of an osteogenic stimulus. Given the rationale that low energy availability is a contributing factor in low bone health, we tested the hypothesis that both hip and lumbar bone mineral density (BMD) should progressively worsen in accordance with the years of riding. In a cross-sectional design, male apprentice (n = 17) and senior (n = 14) jockeys (matched for body mass and fat-free mass) were assessed for hip and lumbar spine BMD, as well as bot...
Determination of body proportion factor in draft horses for the use of bioimpedance spectroscopy.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    June 19, 2018   Volume 59, Issue 6 650-653 
Greco-Otto PR, Léguillette R.Bioelectrical impedance spectroscopy (BIS) instantly assesses body composition to monitor the effects of diet, competition, and illness, though it requires a body proportion factor (Kb). This study aimed to validate a draft horse-specific Kb. The calculated Kb was 1.42, resulting in significantly lower body composition values, with the exception of fat mass. Une spectroscopie de bio-impédance bioélectrique (SBB) évalue instantanément la composition corporelle pour surveiller les effets de la diète, de la compétition et de la maladie, même si elle exige un facteur de proportion corporel...
Effects of oral supplementation of probiotic strains of Lactobacillus rhamnosus and Enterococcus faecium on diarrhoea events of foals in their first weeks of life.
Journal of animal physiology and animal nutrition    May 23, 2018   Volume 102, Issue 5 1357-1365 doi: 10.1111/jpn.12923
Ströbel C, Günther E, Romanowski K, Büsing K, Urubschurov V, Zeyner A.Foal first diarrhoea is one of the most prominent problems in the early life of horses. Probiotics might have the potency to prevent or at least diminish neonatal diarrhoea. We hypothesised that the treatment of foals with probiotic strains of Lactobacillus rhamnosus and Enterococcus faecium starting early after birth and then daily over 2 weeks would prevent or mitigate foal heat diarrhoea. The influence of this probiotic treatment on diarrhoea incidence and growth and health performance of young foals was investigated. Thirty-four foals were randomly allocated to two groups. From day 1 to 1...
Markers of Bone Health, Bone-Specific Physical Activities, Nutritional Intake, and Quality of Life of Professional Jockeys in Hong Kong.
International journal of sport nutrition and exercise metabolism    April 28, 2018   Volume 28, Issue 4 440-446 doi: 10.1123/ijsnem.2016-0176
Poon ET, O'Reilly J, Sheridan S, Cai MM, Wong SH.Weight-making practices, regularly engaged in by horse racing jockeys, have been suggested to impair both physiological and mental health. This study aimed to assess bone health markers, nutritional intake, bone-specific physical activity (PA) habits, and quality of life of professional jockeys in Hong Kong (n = 14), with gender-, age-, and body mass index-matched controls (n = 14). Anthropometric measurements, serum hormonal biomarkers, bone mineral density, bone-specific PA habits, nutritional intake, and quality of life were assessed in all participants. The jockey group displayed s...
Determining safe rider weights for horses.
The Veterinary record    March 17, 2018   Volume 182, Issue 11 305 
No abstract available
Mouldable, thermoplastic, glue-on frog-supportive shoes change hoof kinetics in normal and obese Shetland ponies.
Equine veterinary journal    February 12, 2018   Volume 50, Issue 5 684-689 doi: 10.1111/evj.12814
Sleutjens J, Serra Bragança FM, van Empelen MW, Ten Have RE, de Zwaan J, Roelfsema E, Oosterlinck M, Back W.Obesity and hyperinsulinaemia are frequently encountered in the equine population and risk factors for the development of laminitis. There are many options for hoof support that claim a beneficial effect, but often the scientific evidence is scarce. Objective: To quantify the effect of frog-supportive shoes on hoof kinetics in normal and obese ponies. Methods: Controlled in vivo trial. Methods: Ten Shetland mares (n = 10) with a normal (n = 5) or obese (n = 5) body condition were led over a dynamically calibrated pressure plate before (T0), immediately after (T1) and 72 h (T2) after ap...
Maternal parity affects placental development, growth and metabolism of foals until 1 year and a half.
Theriogenology    December 21, 2017   Volume 108 321-330 doi: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2017.12.019
Robles M, Dubois C, Gautier C, Dahirel M, Guenon I, Bouraima-Lelong H, Viguié C, Wimel L, Couturier-Tarrade A, Chavatte-Palmer P.Primiparous mares are known to produce smaller foals than multiparous mares. This difference seems to be partly explained by the reduced exchange surface and volume of the placental villi in primiparous compared to multiparous placentas. The effect of maternal parity on foals' post-natal growth, metabolism and sexual maturation, however, has been given little consideration. The objectives of this work were to analyse placental biometry and structure at term, growth of foals and yearlings, their metabolism and testicular maturation at one year of age. Twenty multiparous mares (M), aged over 6 y...
Energy expenditure in professional flat jockeys using doubly labelled water during the racing season: Implications for body weight management.
European journal of sport science    December 7, 2017   Volume 18, Issue 2 235-242 doi: 10.1080/17461391.2017.1406996
Wilson G, Lucas D, Hambly C, Speakman JR, Morton JP, Close GL.To formulate individualized dietary strategies for jockeys, it is vital that energy requirements are quantified. We measured total energy expenditure (TEE) over two separate weeks in spring and summer using doubly labelled water in a group of male flat jockeys (n = 8, 36.9 ± 5.7 years, 164 ± 8 cm, 54.6 ± 2.5 kg). Total energy intake (TEI) was self-recorded, as were all riding and structured exercise activity. Mean daily TEE was 10.83 (±2.3) and 10.66 (±1.76) MJ, (p = .61) respectively. Self-reported TEI were 6.03 (±1.7) and 5.37 (±1.1) MJ (p = .40), respectiv...
Effect of track surface firmness on the development of musculoskeletal injuries in French Trotters during four months of harness race training.
American journal of veterinary research    October 28, 2017   Volume 78, Issue 11 1293-1304 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.78.11.1293
Crevier-Denoix N, Audigié F, Emond AL, Dupays AG, Pourcelot P, Desquilbet L, Chateau H, Denoix JM.OBJECTIVE To evaluate the effect of track surface firmness on the development of musculoskeletal injuries in French Trotters during 4 months of race training. ANIMALS 12 healthy 3-year-old French Trotters. PROCEDURES Horses were paired on the basis of sex and body mass. Horses within each pair were randomly assigned to either a hard-track or soft-track group. The counterclockwise training protocol was the same for both groups. Surface firmness of each track was monitored throughout the training period. Radiography, ultrasonography, MRI, and scintigraphy were performed on all 4 limbs of each ho...
Right dorsal colon ultrasonography in normal adult ponies and miniature horses.
PloS one    October 24, 2017   Volume 12, Issue 10 e0186825 doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0186825
Siwinska N, Zak A, Baron M, Cylna M, Borowicz H.The aim of this study was to determine the normal location, wall thickness and motility of the right dorsal colon in adult ponies and miniature horses. The abdominal ultrasonography examination was performed in a study group consisting of 23 ponies and miniature horses and in a control group comprising ten Thoroughbred horses. The procedure was performed in unsedated standing animals. The location and the thickness of the right dorsal colonic wall was examined on the right side of the abdomen between the 10th and the 14th intercostal space. The contractility was recorded in the 12th intercosta...
An exploration of strategies used by dressage horses to control moments around the center of mass when performing passage.
PeerJ    September 28, 2017   Volume 5 e3866 doi: 10.7717/peerj.3866
Clayton HM, Hobbs SJ.Locomotion results from the generation of ground reaction forces (GRF) that cause translations of the center of mass (COM) and generate moments that rotate the body around the COM. The trot is a diagonally-synchronized gait performed by horses at intermediate locomotor speeds. Passage is a variant of the trot performed by highly-trained dressage horses. It is distinguished from trot by having a slow speed of progression combined with great animation of the limbs in the swing phase. The slow speed of passage challenges the horse's ability to control the sagittal-plane moments around the COM. Fo...
Comparison of physical body growth and metabolic and reproductive endocrine functions between north and south climates of Japan in trained Thoroughbred yearling horses.
Journal of equine science    September 20, 2017   Volume 28, Issue 3 77-86 doi: 10.1294/jes.28.77
Tangyuenyong S, Sato F, Nambo Y, Murase H, Endo Y, Tanaka T, Nagaoka K, Watanabe G.This study aimed to compare body growth, metabolic, and reproductive hormonal changes in trained Thoroughbred yearling horses under different climate conditions with and without light supplementation (LS). Thoroughbred yearlings raised at research centers of the Japan Racing Association in Hokkaido (north) or Miyazaki (south) were divided into control and LS groups. In the LS groups, 44 colts and 47 fillies from Hokkaido and 11 colts and 11 fillies from Miyazaki were exposed to LS with an extended photoperiod of 14.5 hr of daylight and 9.5 hr of darkness. One week before and once a month after...
Mechanics of evolutionary digit reduction in fossil horses (Equidae).
Proceedings. Biological sciences    August 25, 2017   Volume 284, Issue 1861 20171174 doi: 10.1098/rspb.2017.1174
McHorse BK, Biewener AA, Pierce SE.Digit reduction is a major trend that characterizes horse evolution, but its causes and consequences have rarely been quantitatively tested. Using beam analysis on fossilized centre metapodials, we tested how locomotor bone stresses changed with digit reduction and increasing body size across the horse lineage. Internal bone geometry was captured from 13 fossil horse genera that covered the breadth of the equid phylogeny and the spectrum of digit reduction and body sizes, from to To account for the load-bearing role of side digits, a novel, continuous measure of digit reduction was also esta...
Maximum permissible load for Kiso horses trotting over a short, straight course.
Animal science journal = Nihon chikusan Gakkaiho    August 24, 2017   Volume 89, Issue 1 232-236 doi: 10.1111/asj.12893
Matsuura A, Inoue S, Irimajiri M, Hodate K.This study aimed to determine the load-bearing capacity of trotting Kiso horses using gait analysis. Ten Kiso horses with a height at withers of 128 cm were included. Their riders were fitted with a marker (70 mm in diameter placed on their chest) recorded by two digital DVD cameras while trotting along a short, straight course. In total, eight tests were performed for each horse: the first with a 70 kg load; six with randomly loaded weights ranging 80-130 kg; and then a final test again with a 70 kg load. Three-dimensional movement of the marker was analyzed using a motion capture system...
Changes in the Total Fecal Bacterial Population in Individual Horses Maintained on a Restricted Diet Over 6 Weeks.
Frontiers in microbiology    August 11, 2017   Volume 8 1502 doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2017.01502
Dougal K, Harris PA, Girdwood SE, Creevey CJ, Curtis GC, Barfoot CF, Argo CM, Newbold CJ.Twelve mature (aged 5-16 years) horses and ponies of mixed breed and type were fed restricted (1.25% BM Dry matter) quantities of one of two fiber based diets formulated to be iso-caloric. Diet 1 comprised of 0.8% body mass (BM) of chaff based complete feed plus 0.45% BM low energy grass hay (the same hay used for both diets). Diet 2 comprised 0.1% BM of a nutrient balancer plus 1.15% BM grass hay. Fecal samples were collected at week 10 and week 16. DNA was extracted and the V1-V2 regions of 16SrDNA were 454-pyrosequenced to investigate the bacterial microbiome of the horse. The two most abun...
Reproductive phenology of Creole horses in Ecuador in the absence of photoperiod variation: The effects of forage availability and flooding affecting body condition of mares.
Animal science journal = Nihon chikusan Gakkaiho    July 27, 2017   Volume 88, Issue 12 2063-2070 doi: 10.1111/asj.12818
Carranza J, Yoong WA, Mateos C, Caño Vergara B, Gómez CL, Macías V.Horse reproduction tends to be seasonal. The main adjusting factor in their original temperate ranges is photoperiod variation, although it is absent in equatorial areas where horses were introduced by European colonizers. Hence, dates of reproduction in these areas may be influenced by factors affecting mares' conditions and the success of foaling. Here we study reproductive timing in Creole horses in Ecuador reared in an extensive production system. We found that foaling peaked in August. Mares' conditions showed one peak in June-July, before the start of the breeding season, and another in ...
The equine glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide receptor: A potential therapeutic target for insulin dysregulation.
Journal of animal science    July 21, 2017   Volume 95, Issue 6 2509-2516 doi: 10.2527/jas.2017.1468
Kheder MH, Sillence MN, Bryant LM, de Laat MA.Metabolic disease is a significant problem that causes a range of species-specific comorbidities. Recently, a better understanding of glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP) biology has led to the suggestion that inhibiting its action may attenuate obesity in several species. In horses, antagonism of GIP may also reduce hyperinsulinemia, which leads to insulin-associated laminitis, a painful comorbidity unique to this species. However, little is known about GIP in horses. The aims of this study were to examine the tissue distribution of equine GIP receptors (eGIPR), to determine whe...
Prediction of foal carcass composition and wholesale cut yields by using video image analysis.
Animal : an international journal of animal bioscience    July 11, 2017   Volume 12, Issue 1 174-182 doi: 10.1017/S1751731117001537
Lorenzo JM, Guedes CM, Agregán R, Sarriés MV, Franco D, Silva SR.This work represents the first contribution for the application of the video image analysis (VIA) technology in predicting lean meat and fat composition in the equine species. Images of left sides of the carcass (n=42) were captured from the dorsal, lateral and medial views using a high-resolution digital camera. A total of 41 measurements (angles, lengths, widths and areas) were obtained by VIA. The variation of percentage of lean meat obtained from the forequarter (FQ) and hindquarter (HQ) carcass ranged between 5.86% and 7.83%. However, the percentage of fat (FAT) obtained from the FQ and H...
Effects of environmental temperature and season on hair coat characteristics, physiologic and reproductive parameters in Shetland pony stallions.
Theriogenology    April 27, 2017   Volume 97 170-178 doi: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2017.04.035
Schmidt K, Deichsel K, de Oliveira RA, Aurich J, Ille N, Aurich C.We hypothesized that housing of stallions in a thermoneutral temperature zone during autumn and winter does not only influence metabolism and hair shedding but also improves the characteristics of raw and processed semen. Fertile Shetland pony stallions were followed from October to June. This time coincided with the seasons autumn, winter and spring. Ponies were kept in outside paddocks (group CON, n = 8) or in indoor stables (group ST, n = 8) from October to March when ST stallions returned to outdoor paddocks, but ponies remained in the same groups. The rectal temperature was measured o...
Repetitive mammalian dwarfing during ancient greenhouse warming events.
Science advances    March 15, 2017   Volume 3, Issue 3 e1601430 doi: 10.1126/sciadv.1601430
D'Ambrosia AR, Clyde WC, Fricke HC, Gingerich PD, Abels HA.Abrupt perturbations of the global carbon cycle during the early Eocene are associated with rapid global warming events, which are analogous in many ways to present greenhouse warming. Mammal dwarfing has been observed, along with other changes in community structure, during the largest of these ancient global warming events, known as the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum [PETM; ~56 million years ago (Ma)]. We show that mammalian dwarfing accompanied the subsequent, smaller-magnitude warming event known as Eocene Thermal Maximum 2 [ETM2 (~53 Ma)]. Statistically significant decrease in body size...
The development of locomotor kinetics in the foal and the effect of osteochondrosis.
Equine veterinary journal    December 22, 2016   Volume 49, Issue 4 467-474 doi: 10.1111/evj.12649
Gorissen BMC, Wolschrijn CF, Serra Bragança FM, Geerts AAJ, Leenders WOJL, Back W, van Weeren PR.Foals stand and walk immediately after birth, but insight into the subsequent longitudinal development of their gait kinetics in the early juvenile phase and the possible influence of osteochondrosis thereon is lacking. Objective: To quantify gait kinetics in foals during the first half year of life, taking into account their osteochondrosis status. Methods: Prospective, cohort study performed at a single stud farm. Methods: Pressure plate measurements at walk and trot from 11 Dutch Warmblood foals during the first 24 weeks of life were used to determine body mass normalised peak vertical forc...
Timing of head movements is consistent with energy minimization in walking ungulates.
Proceedings. Biological sciences    December 3, 2016   Volume 283, Issue 1843 20161908 doi: 10.1098/rspb.2016.1908
Loscher DM, Meyer F, Kracht K, Nyakatura JA.Many ungulates show a conspicuous nodding motion of the head when walking. Until now, the functional significance of this behaviour remained unclear. Combining in vivo kinematics of quadrupedal mammals with a computer model, we show that the timing of vertical displacements of the head and neck is consistent with minimizing energy expenditure for carrying these body parts in an inverted pendulum walking gait. Varying the timing of head movements in the model resulted in increased metabolic cost estimate for carrying the head and neck of up to 63%. Oscillations of the head-neck unit result in w...
Relationships between body condition score and ultrasound skin-associated subcutaneous fat depth in equids.
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica    October 20, 2016   Volume 58, Issue Suppl 1 62 doi: 10.1186/s13028-016-0243-2
Silva SR, Payan-Carreira R, Quaresma M, Guedes CM, Santos AS.In equids, health and welfare depend on body composition. A growing number of equids are now used as leisure and companion animals, and often found overfeed. The need for a close monitoring of body fatness led to the search for tools allowing a rapid and non-invasive estimation of fatness. This study intends to assess real-time ultrasonography (RTU) usefulness in establishing a relationship between ultrasound measures of subcutaneous fat-plus-skin thickness (SF-Skin) and body condition score (BCS) in horses and donkeys. Forty-three healthy animals (16 donkeys and 27 horses) were used in this s...
Prospective cohort study evaluating risk factors for the development of pasture-associated laminitis in the United Kingdom.
Equine veterinary journal    August 25, 2016   Volume 49, Issue 3 300-306 doi: 10.1111/evj.12606
Menzies-Gow NJ, Harris PA, Elliott J.Certain individuals appear to be predisposed to recurrent pasture-associated laminitis. Previous studies have predominantly investigated risk factors only after disease occurrence. Objective: To investigate risk factors for pasture-associated laminitis prior to disease occurrence. Methods: Prospective cohort study. Methods: Non-laminitic ponies aged ≥7 years were recruited. Body condition score (BCS), height, weight, crest height and thickness were measured and an overnight dexamethasone suppression test performed. Plasma or serum adiponectin, leptin, triglyceride, basal insulin, insulin pos...
Relationship of skeletal muscle inflammation with obesity and obesity-associated hyperinsulinemia in horses. Banse HE, Holbrook TC, Frank N, McFarlane D.Local (skeletal muscle and adipose) and systemic inflammation are implicated in the development of obesity-associated insulin resistance in humans. In horses, obesity is neither strongly nor consistently associated with systemic inflammation. The role of skeletal muscle inflammation in the development of insulin dysregulation (insulin resistance or hyperinsulinemia) remains to be determined. We hypothesized that skeletal muscle inflammation is related to obesity-associated hyperinsulinemia in horses. Thirty-five light-breed horses with body condition scores (BCSs) of 3/9 to 9/9 were studied, i...
Echocardiographic Assessment of Left Atrial Size and Function in Warmblood Horses: Reference Intervals, Allometric Scaling, and Agreement of Different Echocardiographic Variables.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    June 30, 2016   Volume 30, Issue 4 1241-1252 doi: 10.1111/jvim.14368
Huesler IM, Mitchell KJ, Schwarzwald CC.Echocardiographic assessment of left atrial (LA) size and function in horses is not standardized. Objective: The aim of this study was to establish reference intervals for echocardiographic indices of LA size and function in Warmblood horses and to provide proof of concept for allometric scaling of variables and for the clinical use of area-based indices. Methods: Thirty-one healthy Warmblood horses and 91 Warmblood horses with a primary diagnosis of mitral regurgitation (MR) or aortic regurgitation (AR). Methods: Retrospective study. Echocardiographic indices of LA size and function were meas...
Thyroid hormones correlate with field metabolic rate in ponies, Equus ferus caballus.
The Journal of experimental biology    June 16, 2016   Volume 219, Issue Pt 16 2559-2566 doi: 10.1242/jeb.138784
Brinkmann L, Gerken M, Hambly C, Speakman JR, Riek A.During winter, free-living herbivores are often exposed to reduced energy supply at the same time that energy needs for thermoregulation increase. Several wild herbivores as well as robust horse breeds reduce their metabolism during times of low ambient temperature and food shortage. Thyroid hormones (THs) affect metabolic intensity and a positive effect of THs on basal metabolic rate (BMR) has been demonstrated in mammals and birds. As BMR and field metabolic rate (FMR) are often assumed to be intrinsically linked, THs may represent a reliable indicator for FMR. To test this hypothesis, 10 Sh...
Length of winter coat in horses depending on husbandry conditions.
Animal science journal = Nihon chikusan Gakkaiho    May 27, 2016   Volume 88, Issue 2 339-346 doi: 10.1111/asj.12587
Bocian K, Strzelec K, Janczarek I, Jabłecki Z, Kolstrung R.This paper analyzes changes in the length of coat on selected body areas in horses and ponies kept under different husbandry (stable) conditions during the winter-spring period. The study included 12 Małpolski geldings and 12 geldings of Felin ponies aged 10-15 years. Horses were kept in two stables (six horses and six ponies in each stable). The type of performance, husbandry conditions and feeding of the studied animals were comparable. As of December 1, samples of hair coat from the scapula, sternum, back and abdomen areas of both body sides were collected seven times. The lengths of 20 ra...
New insights on equid locomotor evolution from the lumbar region of fossil horses.
Proceedings. Biological sciences    April 29, 2016   Volume 283, Issue 1829 doi: 10.1098/rspb.2015.2947
Jones KE.The specialization of equid limbs for cursoriality is a classic case of adaptive evolution, but the role of the axial skeleton in this famous transition is not well understood. Extant horses are extremely fast and efficient runners, which use a stiff-backed gallop with reduced bending of the lumbar region relative to other mammals. This study tests the hypothesis that stiff-backed running in horses evolved in response to evolutionary increases in body size by examining lumbar joint shape from a broad sample of fossil equids in a phylogenetic context. Lumbar joint shape scaling suggests that st...