Analyze Diet

Topic:Dietary Supplements

Dietary supplements for horses are products added to a horse's diet to provide additional nutrients that may not be sufficiently available in their regular feed. These supplements can include vitamins, minerals, amino acids, and herbal compounds. They are used to address specific nutritional needs, support general health, or enhance performance and recovery. Common types of supplements include those targeting joint health, digestive support, and hoof condition. The efficacy and safety of these supplements can vary, and their use often requires careful consideration of the horse's overall diet and health status. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the composition, usage, and impact of dietary supplements on equine nutrition and health.
[Revision evaluation of feed for horses].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    September 15, 1995   Volume 120, Issue 18 546 
Hallebeek AJ.No abstract available
[Pharmacological effects of hordenine].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    June 1, 1995   Volume 102, Issue 6 228-232 
Hapke HJ, Strathmann W.Hordenine is an ingredient of some plants which are used as feed for animals, i.e. in sprouting barley. After ingestion of such feed hordenine may be detected in blood or urine of horses which in case of racing horses may be the facts of using prohibited compounds. Results of some experiments in pharmacological models show that hordenine is an indirectly acting adrenergic drug. It liberates norepinephrine from stores. In isolated organs and those structures with reduced epinephrine contents the hordenine-effect is only very poor. Experiments in intact animals (rats, dogs) show that hordenine h...
Hoof horn abnormalities in Lipizzaner horses and the effect of dietary biotin on macroscopic aspects of hoof horn quality.
Equine veterinary journal    May 1, 1995   Volume 27, Issue 3 175-182 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1995.tb03060.x
Josseck H, Zenker W, Geyer H.This study involved a macroscopic evaluation of hoof quality in 152 Lipizzaner horses (130 from Austria and 22 from other countries) and a controlled double blind trial of the effects of biotin on hoof horn growth and quality over 19 months in 42 stallions from the Spanish Riding School (SRS) in Vienna. Using a grading system that incorporated evaluation of horn wall, white line, sole and frog, the macroscopic study revealed the following: 90% of the Austrian Lipizzaners had soft white lines and crumbling, fissured horn at the bearing border of the walls; 39% of the stallions of the SRS, > ...
Trace mineral supplementation of yearling horses.
Journal of animal science    February 1, 1995   Volume 73, Issue 2 466-471 doi: 10.2527/1995.732466x
Ott EA, Asquith RL.Thirty-three Thoroughbred and Quarter Horse yearlings were used in two experiments (18 in Exp. 1 and 15 in Exp. 2) to determine the influence of trace mineral (TM) supplementation on growth and bone mineral content in young growing horses from 340 to 452 d of age. In each experiment the yearlings were assigned at random within breed and sex outcome groups to one of three treatments. Horses were fed assigned concentrates individually to appetite for two 1.5-h feeding periods, daily and group-fed Coastal bermudagrass (Cynodon dactylon) hay in drylot paddocks at a rate of 1.0 kg/100 kg BW daily. ...
Dietary protein and(or) energy restriction in mares: plasma glucose, insulin, nonesterified fatty acid, and urea nitrogen responses to feeding, glucose, and epinephrine.
Journal of animal science    January 1, 1995   Volume 73, Issue 1 136-144 doi: 10.2527/1995.731136x
Sticker LS, Thompson DL, Bunting LD, Fernandez JM, DePew CL.Sixteen light horse mares (8 to 9 yr of age; 457 to 579 kg BW) were fed Bermudagrass hay and a corn/cottonseed hull-based supplement formulated to contain either 100% (control) or 50% (restricted) of the protein and(or) energy requirements for maintenance in a 2 x 2 factorial arrangement of treatments. Daily measurements of intake, BW, and plasma hormones and metabolites were made for 33 d. Plasma glucose, insulin, NEFA, and urea N were measured in hourly samples drawn on d 27, and parallel with an i.v. glucose tolerance test (IVGTT) and epinephrine challenge on d 29. Energy restriction increa...
[Physiology of intestinal absorption of phosphorus in animals].
Reproduction, nutrition, development    January 1, 1995   Volume 35, Issue 5 475-489 
Barlet JP, Davicco MJ, Coxam V.Intestinal absorption of inorganic phosphorus. In most mammalian species inorganic phosphorus (P) is absorbed at the duodenal and jejunal level. However in horses some P is absorbed from the large intestine, whereas in ruminant animals some absorption also takes place in the forestomachs. The structure of the putative phosphate-sodium carrier of the brush border from enterocytes still awaits identification. P absorption is modulated both by endocrine (calcitriol, triiodothyronine) and nutritional factors (minerals of the diet, chemical form of phosphorus). Regulation of salivary P secretion, i...
Ergogenic aids to performance in the race horse: nutrients or drugs.
The Journal of nutrition    December 1, 1994   Volume 124, Issue 12 Suppl 2730S-2735S doi: 10.1093/jn/124.suppl_12.2730S
Snow DH.Since the domestication of the horse and its use in various types of athletic competition, its diet has developed from that associated with grazing to feeding of additional energy in the form of grains up to the present situation when numerous supplements are fed in hopes of enhancing performance. Many if not all of these may be considered as ergogenic aids, and under the rules of racing in many countries should be considered as a prohibited substance. Until recently, a blind eye has been turned to whether the rules should be enforced against many nutritional supplements, for example, vitamins...
The potential for dietary polyunsaturated fatty acids in domestic animals.
Australian veterinary journal    October 1, 1994   Volume 71, Issue 10 342-345 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1994.tb00916.x
Bauer JE.The metabolism and clinical potential for dietary polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) modifications using oil supplements containing n-3 and n-6 fatty acids are reviewed. Their use in such disorders as renal disease, inflammatory and immune-related disorders, and dermatological conditions in dogs and cats is discussed. The influence of n-3 fatty acid-rich rations on the endotoxin response in horses is described. Progress has been made toward understanding the clinical potential for PUFAs in these species. However, they have not yet been shown to be efficacious in any of the conditions investig...
Diet and exercise performance in the horse.
The Proceedings of the Nutrition Society    March 1, 1994   Volume 53, Issue 1 189-206 doi: 10.1079/pns19940022
Frape DL.No abstract available
The effect of supplemental lysine and threonine on growth and development of yearling horses.
Journal of animal science    February 1, 1994   Volume 72, Issue 2 380-386 doi: 10.2527/1994.722380x
Graham PM, Ott EA, Brendemuhl JH, TenBroeck SH.Thirty-nine Thoroughbred and Quarter Horse yearlings were used in two 112-d experiments to determine the effect of lysine and threonine supplementation on growth and development. Yearlings were individually fed three dietary treatments that consisted of a pelleted concentrate containing corn, oats, and soybean meal fed to appetite twice daily and Coastal bermuda grass hay group-fed at a rate of 1 kg/100 kg BW. Three concentrates were tested: (A) basal, (B) basal plus .2% lysine, and (C) basal plus .2% lysine, and .1% threonine. Feed intake, weight, withers height, girth, hip height, body lengt...
The long-term influence of biotin supplementation on hoof horn quality in horses.
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    January 1, 1994   Volume 136, Issue 4 137-149 
Geyer H, Schulze J.The influence of dietary biotin in horses with brittle hoof horn and chipped hooves was investigated in a long-term study, which was performed over a period from one to six years. 97 horses received 5 mg of biotin per 100 to 150 kg of body weight, per os, daily; 11 horses were not supplemented with biotin and served as controls. The hooves of all horses were evaluated macroscopically every three to four months. Hoof horn specimens of the proximal wall were examined histologically and physically in 25 and 15 horses, respectively. The tensile strength of normal coronary horn was 60 N/mm2 or grea...
The effect of added dietary soybean oil on vitamin E status of the horse.
Journal of animal science    December 1, 1993   Volume 71, Issue 12 3399-3402 doi: 10.2527/1993.71123399x
Siciliano PD, Wood CH.Fourteen 2-yr-old Quarter Horses and Quarter Horse x Thoroughbreds were randomly assigned to either a control (CTRL) diet or a diet supplemented with 6.4% soybean oil (SBO). The amounts of both diets that were fed met current NRC nutrient requirements and were isoenergetic with similar nutrient:energy ratios. Venous blood samples (20 mL) were taken at d 0, 30, 60, and 90 of the experiment and analyzed for serum alpha-tocopherol, serum cholesterol, and serum triglyceride. The sum of serum cholesterol and serum triglyceride values was used as an estimate of serum total lipid. The ratio of serum ...
Effect of carnitine supplement to the dam on plasma carnitine concentration in the sucking foal.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 1 49-52 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb02901.x
Benamou AE, Harris RC.The changes in carnitine in plasma and milk during the first 3 months of lactation were studied in 14 broodmares and their foals. Six of the mares (Group S) were given a supplement of 10 g carnitine split between the morning and evening feeds, starting 2 weeks before birth. At birth the plasma carnitine concentration in Group S mares was about twice that in Group NS mares (no supplement). In both groups the concentration initially declined in the days after birth. Whilst this trend was reversed in Group S mares, the concentration in Group NS mares remained at a reduced level for the remainder ...
Basis for regulation of selenium supplements in animal diets.
Journal of animal science    December 1, 1992   Volume 70, Issue 12 3922-3927 doi: 10.2527/1992.70123922x
Ullrey DE.Selenium was discovered 174 yr ago but, until 1957, was given little notice by biologists or was vilified as an agent that caused toxicity in grazing ruminants and horses in the northern Great Plains. After its status as an essential nutrient was established, Se received intense scrutiny, and hundreds of papers have been published dealing with its metabolic functions and the consequences of a Se deficiency. Because regions of Se deficiency are so extensive in the United States, great efforts have been made to gain Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval for Se supplementation of animal die...
Effect of dietary biotin supplement on equine hoof horn growth rate and hardness.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1992   Volume 24, Issue 6 472-474 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1992.tb02879.x
Buffa EA, Van Den Berg SS, Verstraete FJ, Swart NG.Over a 10-month period, 24 randomly selected riding horses were fed various amounts of biotin. Statistically significant improvements in growth rates and hardness of hooves were produced by biotin supplementation. Greater growth rates and hardness were achieved at a daily dose of 15 mg than at 7.5 mg. Increased hoof hardness was greatest in the hoof quarters and toe. No ring formation occurred in hooves of horses fed biotin intermittently.
Dietary selenate versus selenite for cattle, sheep, and horses.
Journal of animal science    June 1, 1992   Volume 70, Issue 6 1965-1970 doi: 10.2527/1992.7061965x
Podoll KL, Bernard JB, Ullrey DE, DeBar SR, Ku PK, Magee WT.Food and Drug Administration regulations currently permit addition of .3 mg of Se per kilogram of diet for chickens, turkeys, ducks, swine, sheep, and cattle. However, field reports indicate that this level may not be adequate for ruminants in all situations. Because sodium selenite is the most common supplemental form and is known to be readily absorbed to particles or reduced to insoluble elemental Se or selenides in acid, anaerobic environments, studies were conducted with dairy cattle, sheep, and horses fed sodium selenate to determine whether Se from this source was more bioavailable than...
Voluntary intake, milk production and plasma metabolites in nursing mares fed two different diets.
The Journal of nutrition    April 1, 1992   Volume 122, Issue 4 992-999 doi: 10.1093/jn/122.4.992
Doreau M, Boulot S, Bauchart D, Barlet JP, Martin-Rosset W.Voluntary food intake, milk yield and composition, and blood metabolites were measured during the first 2 mo of lactation in draft broodmares fed diets containing either 95% hay and 5% concentrates (Diet F) or 50% hay and 50% concentrates (Diet C). Voluntary food intake was higher for mares fed Diet C than for those fed Diet F (22.9 vs. 21.4 kg dry matter in wk 4). Both diets, especially Diet C, were eaten in amounts exceeding the energy requirements. Daily milk yield in wk 4 was 26.4 kg and 23.4 kg for mares fed Diets C and F, respectively. Milk fat and protein concentrations were higher (P l...
A comparison between the nutritive value of short-cutting cycle, high temperature-dried alfalfa and timothy hay for horses.
Equine veterinary journal    March 1, 1992   Volume 24, Issue 2 84-89 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1992.tb02788.x
Cí·¯ord D, Woodhead A, Muirhead R.The objective was to evaluate the nutritive value of short-cutting cycle, high temperature-dried (SCCHTD) alfalfa compared to timothy hay. This was achieved by carrying out 4 x 4 Latin Square digestibility trial using 4 Thoroughbred (one three-quarter Thoroughbred) horses (mean liveweight, 531 kg). The four dietary treatments were 0AA (timothy hay only), 33AA (0.33 alfalfa: 0.67 timothy hay), 67AA (0.67 alfalfa: 0.33 timothy hay) and 100AA (alfalfa only). Digestibility data were obtained by using acid-insoluble ash to estimate apparent digestibility coefficients of nutrients. Rate of passage o...
Common horse sense.
Scientific American    October 1, 1991   Volume 265, Issue 4 12 
Heinrich B.This research article corrects a common misconception about the energy metabolism in horses during short sprinting and long-distance running events, emphasizing that short sprints are primarily powered by anaerobic activity, […]
Equine nutritional research: some food for thought?
Equine veterinary journal    September 1, 1991   Volume 23, Issue 5 323-325 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1991.tb03729.x
Cí·¯ord D.No abstract available
Effect of dietary alpha-linolenic acid on endotoxin-induced production of tumor necrosis factor by peritoneal macrophages in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    April 1, 1991   Volume 52, Issue 4 528-532 
Morris DD, Henry MM, Moore JN, Fischer JK.A study was conducted to determine whether dietary supplements with alpha-linolenic acid altered the ability of equine peritoneal macrophages to produce tumor necrosis factor (TNF) in response to endotoxin. Peritoneal macrophages were harvested from 6 healthy adult horses before and after the horses were fed a nutritionally balanced ration that contained 8% linseed oil as a source of alpha-linolenic acid. The macrophages were cultured in media containing no additives (control), endotoxin (0.5 to 50 ng/ml), or the calcium ionophore, A23187. Macrophage supernatants were collected after 6 and 24 ...
[Myopathies in a riding horse stable].
Tierarztliche Praxis    April 1, 1991   Volume 19, Issue 2 167-169 
Zentek J.In this case report on myopathies in 6 saddle-horses, a combined dietary vitamin E and selenium deficiency is presumed. Other disorders, such as exertional myopathy ("Monday morning disease") due to excessive energy intake or ionophore intoxication could be excluded by calculating the energy supply or by a simple colour test. The selenium requirement of horses is estimated to 0.1-0.2 mg/kg dry matter (Meyer 1986). If natural feed compounds are low in selenium, adequate amounts of this trace element can be supplied by means of supplemental feeds, sodium selenite (20 mg/500 kg BW/week) or bruise...
Effects of a protein deficient diet and urea supplementation on lactating mares.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1991   Volume 44 543-550 
Martin RG, McMeniman NP, Dowsett KF.Six lactating mares were fed either a low protein diet or the same diet with added urea ad libitum over 71 days. The quantity consumed by the mares, milk intakes of their foals, milk composition, plasma urea nitrogen (PUN), mare liveweight changes and foal growth rates were measured. The mares were unable to consume sufficient quantities of either diet to meet their nitrogen requirements and all lost weight. Adding urea to the diet significantly increased PUN in mares and foals, raised urea concentrations in the milk, decreased the mares' feed intake and significantly increased their weight lo...
[Pharmacologic effects of biotin on epidermal cells].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    January 1, 1991   Volume 133, Issue 6 277-283 
Fritsche A, Mathis GA, Althaus FR.Biotin deficiency in animals causes pathological changes of the skin and its appendages including, for example, exfoliative dermatitis, depigmentation, and alopecia. The hooves of biotin-deficient swine are weak, brittle, and often necrotic. These changes disappear after dietary biotin supplementation. Biotin supplementation also noticeably improves the hoof quality of horses, cattle and swine having no apparent biotin deficiency. In order to elucidate the molecular basis of these effects, the influence of biotin on cytokeratin expression in a keratinocyte cell line (Ha-CaT) was investigated u...
Ultrastructural observation on the response of equine hoof defects to dietary supplementation with Farrier’s Formula.
The Veterinary record    November 17, 1990   Volume 127, Issue 20 494-498 
Kempson SA.Farrier's Formula feed supplement was added to the diet of 18 horses with two types of hoof horn defects. The first group of horses showed sand cracks and crumbling horn around the nail holes; the second group suffered frequent bruising and had flat feet with collapsed heels. Hoof clippings from both groups were studied in the transmission and scanning electron microscopes. All the horses showed a progressive improvement in the gross and microscopic structure of the hoof horn, starting six weeks after the supplementation began. Once good quality hoof horn had grown there was no relapse during ...
The effects of copper supplementation on the prevalence of cartilage lesions in foals.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1990   Volume 22, Issue 6 426-432 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1990.tb04310.x
Knight DA, Weisbrode SE, Schmall LM, Reed SM, Gabel AA, Bramlage LR, Tyznik WI.The potential role of dietary copper in the development of cartilage defects in foals was investigated. Twenty-one mares were fed rations containing 13 ppm copper (CuC, control) or 32 ppm copper (CuS, supplemented) during the last three to six months of gestation and first three months of lactation. Their foals were fed pelleted concentrate containing 15 or 55 ppm Cu and were destroyed at 90 (5 CuC and 5 CuS foals) or 180 (6 CuC and 5 CuS foals) days. Focal cartilage lesions were found at multiple sites on necropsy. In foals killed at 90 days, there were over twice (9 versus 4) as many lesions...
Effect of dietary alpha-linolenic acid on equine monocyte procoagulant activity and eicosanoid synthesis.
Circulatory shock    November 1, 1990   Volume 32, Issue 3 173-188 
Henry MM, Moore JN, Feldman EB, Fischer JK, Russell B.To investigate the effects of an omega-3 fatty acid-enriched ration on the in vitro response of equine monocytes to endotoxin, an 8-week feeding trial was conducted in which linseed oil served as the source of the omega-3 fatty acid, alpha-linolenic acid. One group of horses was fed a control pelleted ration and the other group was fed an 8% linseed oil-enriched pelleted ration. After 8 weeks of feeding, monocytes were isolated and incubated in the presence of Escherichia coli O55:B5 endotoxin for 6 hr. After 8 weeks on the rations, the mean procoagulant activity and thromboxane B2 production ...
Clinical nutrition.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    August 1, 1990   Volume 6, Issue 2 281-478 
No abstract available
A survey of whole blood selenium concentrations of horses in Maryland.
The Cornell veterinarian    July 1, 1990   Volume 80, Issue 3 251-258 
Carmel DK, Crisman MV, Ley WB, Irby MH, Edwards GH.We surveyed the whole blood selenium status of a randomly sampled population of horses from 4 contiguous counties in northern Maryland. Two hundred and two horses from 74 farms were sampled. Whole blood selenium levels greater than or equal to 0.100 parts per million (ppm) were considered adequate; blood levels less than 0.100 ppm were considered marginal or deficient. The average blood selenium concentration of the horses sampled was 0.137 ppm, with a standard deviation of 0.041 ppm. Blood selenium concentrations ranged from 0.050-0.266 ppm. Thirty-eight of 202 horses (18.8%) had a selenium l...
The effect of dietary selenium on humoral immunocompetence of ponies.
Journal of animal science    May 1, 1990   Volume 68, Issue 5 1311-1317 doi: 10.2527/1990.6851311x
Knight DA, Tyznik WJ.Fifteen Shetland ponies were used in a 7-wk trial to study the effect of supplemental Se on humoral antibody production. Four 3-yr-old, five 2-yr-old and six yearling ponies were depleted of Se before being assigned randomly to either a low Se (.02 ppm) or higher Se (.22 ppm) diet. Each pony was challenged antigenically with 2 ml of sheep packed red blood cells upon receiving its respective diet and again 2 wk post-treatment. Blood samples were drawn weekly and assayed for glutathione peroxidase activity, Se and immunoglobulin concentration and antibody titers. Compared with those ponies recei...
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