Analyze Diet

Topic:Digestibility

Digestibility in horses refers to the process by which horses break down and absorb nutrients from their feed. It involves the mechanical and chemical breakdown of feed components in the digestive tract, enabling nutrient absorption into the bloodstream. Digestibility is influenced by various factors, including feed type, processing methods, and individual horse health. Commonly examined components include fiber, protein, starch, and fat, each requiring specific digestive processes. Research in this area often focuses on optimizing feed formulations and understanding the digestive efficiency of different feedstuffs. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the mechanisms of digestion, factors affecting digestibility, and implications for equine nutrition and health.
[Establishment of a re-entrant ileo-cecal fistula in Equidae].
Annales de recherches veterinaires. Annals of veterinary research    January 1, 1987   Volume 18, Issue 1 35-41 
Brugère H, Castellani G, Boxebeld A, Wolter R.A re-entrant cannulation of the digestive tract was performed in Equidae (ponies and donkeys) between the distal extremity of the ileum and the base of the caecum. The operative technique was conceived to avoid risks of infection of the peritoneal cavity: the openings of the ileum and of the caecum were achieved only after the closure of the abdominal wall incision. Two donkeys were still alive ten months after the operation. This method can provide a convenient model for digestibility studies in Equidae, particularly for assessment of the pre-caecal digestibility.
Extensive large colon resection in the pony. II. Digestibility studies and postmortem findings. Ducharme NG, Burton JH, van Dreumel AA, Horney FD, Baird JD, Arighi M.The nutritional implications and adaptive processes resulting from resection of 75% of the length of the large colon in ponies were investigated. Ten ponies in good physical condition were divided into two groups: six in the experimental group and four in the control group. During the sixth postoperative month, two digestibility studies were conducted, and phosphate fractional renal excretion and serum biochemical profiles were determined in both groups. The ponies (N = 10) were euthanized six months postoperatively, and gross and histopathological examinations were performed. Results of the s...
Digestion in horses after resection or ischemic insult of the large colon.
American journal of veterinary research    October 1, 1986   Volume 47, Issue 10 2290-2293 
Ralston SL, Sullins KE, Stashak TS.The effect of 60% resection of the large colon vs ischemic insult without resection on the ability of horses to digest grass hay was investigated. Digestion trials were performed on 9 horses before surgery (base line) and 3 weeks, 6 weeks, and 6 months after surgery. The percentage of apparent digestion of crude protein, crude fiber, nitrogen-free extract, calcium, phosphorus, magnesium, manganese, copper, and zinc was calculated. Horses that had resection (n = 5) had decreased apparent digestion of crude protein, crude fiber, and phosphorus 3 weeks after surgery, compared with those in horses...
Composition of milk from pony mares fed various levels of digestible energy.
The Cornell veterinarian    April 1, 1986   Volume 76, Issue 2 139-148 
Pagan JD, Hintz HF.Twenty-two pony mares were fed one of three diets that provided 93.0, 74.8 or 57.2 kcal of digestible energy (DE) per kg body weight per day. Milk samples were taken at 14 day intervals. A total of five samples were taken from each mare. The samples were analyzed for total solids, crude protein, lactose, total lipids, ash, calcium and phosphorus. Gross energy was calculated from composition data. Increases in energy intake decreased the concentration of total solids, protein, fat and gross energy of mare's milk. Energy intake had a greater influence on the mare's body condition than on milk en...
Alternative feedstuffs for horses.
In practice    March 1, 1986   Volume 8, Issue 2 68-70 doi: 10.1136/inpract.8.2.68
Cí·¯ord D.No abstract available
Influence of level of feeding and nutrient content of the concentrate on growth and development of yearling horses.
Journal of animal science    February 1, 1986   Volume 62, Issue 2 290-299 doi: 10.2527/jas1986.622290x
Ott EA, Asquith RL.Three experiments using 63 Thoroughbred and Quarter Horse yearlings were conducted to evaluate the influence of level of feeding, and protein and calculated energy content of pelleted concentrates on growth and bone development. Animals were housed in drylot paddocks and individually fed concentrates twice daily. Coastal bermudagrass (Cynodon dyctylon) hay was group-fed. Yearlings offered a corn-based concentrate (3.56 Mcal digestible energy [DE]/kg) consumed levels of dry matter similar to yearlings fed a mixed-grain concentrate (3.32 Mcal DE/kg but consumed slightly more digestible energy. N...
Big bale silage as a horse feed.
The Veterinary record    January 11, 1986   Volume 118, Issue 2 55 doi: 10.1136/vr.118.2.55-b
Ricketts SW, Frape DL.No abstract available
The effects of caloric dilution on meal patterns and food intake of ponies.
Physiology & behavior    October 1, 1985   Volume 35, Issue 4 549-554 doi: 10.1016/0031-9384(85)90139-8
Laut JE, Houpt KA, Hintz HF, Houpt TR.In order to determine if horses will increase their intake in response to caloric dilution, four pony geldings were fed ad lib a mixed grain diet either undiluted (3.4 Mcal/kg of digestible energy) or diluted (wt/wt) with 25% sawdust (2.6 Mcal/kg) or with 50% sawdust (1.7 Mcal/kg). The mean daily caloric intake was 17,457 kcal (3.4 Mcal diet), 17,546 kcal (2.6 Mcal diet) and 12,844 kcal (1.7 Mcal). The mean time spent eating was 246 (3.4 Mcal), 351 (2.6 Mcal), and 408 (1.7 Mcal) minutes/day. Meal size increased and meal frequency decreased with increasing dilution. The median long survivorship...
Effects of level of dietary protein and exercise on growth rates of horses.
Equine veterinary journal    September 1, 1985   Volume 17, Issue 5 381-385 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1985.tb02529.x
Orton RK, Hume ID, Leng RA.Rates of growth were measured in two-year-old (Experiment 1) and nine-month-old (Experiment 2) horses fed high (12 or 14 per cent) or low (6 or 8 per cent) crude protein diets with one of two levels of exercise (0 or 12 km trotting per day at 12 km/h). In the non-exercised horses feed intakes and growth rates were greater on the high than on the low protein diets. Exercise increased feed intakes and growth rates of horses on the low but not the high protein diets, so that in the exercised groups there were no significant differences in feed intakes or growth rates between the horses on the two...
Effects of exercise and level of dietary protein on digestive function in horses.
Equine veterinary journal    September 1, 1985   Volume 17, Issue 5 386-390 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1985.tb02530.x
Orton RK, Hume ID, Leng RA.Rates of passage of fluid and particulate digesta markers and apparent digestibility estimated by three methods were compared in yearling horses fed high (14 per cent) or low (8 per cent) crude protein diets with one of two levels of exercise (0 or 12 km trotting per day at 12 km/h). Mean retention times (MRT) of the fluid marker (51Cr-EDTA) were shorter than those of the particulate marker (ruthenium-phenanthroline). There were no significant effects of dietary protein level on passage of either marker or on apparent digestibility of dry matter. Exercise increased voluntary feed intake and ap...
Protein requirements of mature working horses.
Journal of animal science    July 1, 1985   Volume 61, Issue 1 187-196 doi: 10.2527/jas1985.611187x
Patterson PH, Coon CN, Hughes IM.Eighteen mature horses were used to study proteins requirements of working horses. Treatments included intense exercise, medium exercise and maintenance in a 3 X 3 factorial arrangement with three levels of calculated dietary crude protein (CP; 8.5, 7.0 and 5.5%). The horses were on the various exercise-protein treatments for 60 d, then fasted 4 d to evaluate their N status after the treatment period. Exercise had no significant effect on body weight over the feeding and fasting periods. No one exercise or protein treatment expressed the classical low plasma albumin or total protein concentrat...
The influence of dietary fiber digestibility on the nitrogen requirements of mature horses.
Journal of animal science    March 1, 1984   Volume 58, Issue 3 638-646 doi: 10.2527/jas1984.583638x
Glade MJ.Mature geldings at maintenance were fed different diets in a 4 x 4 Latin square design balanced to account for residual effects in an attempt to determine whether differences in the digestibility of the fibrous portions of feedstuffs would influence dietary nitrogen (N) requirements. Diet 1 contained corn and soybean meal (SBM); diet 2, corn, corn oil and urea; diet 3, corn, SBM, straw and urea; diet 4, corn, alfalfa and urea. Urea supplied 50% of the total N in diets 2 and 3 and 39% of the total N in diet 4. The diets were fed in amounts that met National Research Council (NRC) recommendation...
[Digestive physiology of the horse. 8. Prececal digestibility of starch and lactose and their effect on cecal metabolism].
Zeitschrift fur Tierphysiologie, Tierernahrung und Futtermittelkunde    November 1, 1983   Volume 50, Issue 4-5 157-169 
Lindemann G, Schmidt M, Meyer H.No abstract available
Nitrogen partitioning along the equine digestive tract.
Journal of animal science    October 1, 1983   Volume 57, Issue 4 943-953 doi: 10.2527/jas1983.574943x
Glade MJ.Twelve adult horses were fed a corn-oats-timothy hay diet containing 2.87% nitrogen (N) for 4 wk and were then killed. Fresh digesta samples were immediately harvested from the stomach, duodenum, jejunum, ileum, cecum, large colon, small colon, rectum and feces. Total N content of the digesta (on a dry matter basis) increased from the stomach (2.74%) to the duodenum (5.58%; P less than .01), decreased in the cecum (3.10%, P less than .01), remained constant through the large intestine and decreased in the feces (2.10%; P less than .01). High-speed centrifugation of wet digesta and low-speed ce...
A report on the consumption, composition and nutritional adequacy of a mixture of lush green perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne) and cocksfoot (Dactylis glomerata) fed ad libitum to Thoroughbred mares.
Journal of the South African Veterinary Association    September 1, 1983   Volume 54, Issue 3 155-157 
Marlow CH, van Tonder EM, Hayward FC, van der Merwe SS, Price LE.Non-pregnant Thoroughbred mares were stabled and subjected to 2 trials, each 24 h in duration, to establish their total consumption of a mixture of freshly cut, lush green perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne) and cocksfoot (Dactylis glomerata) in approximately equal proportions; and to compare the total intake of crude protein, calcium, phosphorus and mass of the grass mixture on a dry matter basis with their daily nutritional requirements. The body mass of each mare was calculated at the commencement of each trial. In the first trial 2 lactating mares with foals at foot, 65 days and 8 days of ...
Digestible energy requirements for exercising horses.
Journal of animal science    January 1, 1983   Volume 56, Issue 1 91-95 doi: 10.2527/jas1983.56191x
Anderson CE, Potter GD, Kreider JL, Courtney CC.No abstract available
Effect of diet on the oral D-xylose absorption test in the horse.
American journal of veterinary research    October 1, 1982   Volume 43, Issue 10 1856-1858 
Jacobs KA, Norman P, Hodgson DR, Cymbaluk N.No abstract available
The apparent digestibility of ‘complete diet’ cubes given to Thoroughbred horses and the use of chromic oxide as an inert faecal marker.
The British veterinary journal    July 1, 1982   Volume 138, Issue 4 350-355 doi: 10.1016/s0007-1935(17)31040-0
Parkins JJ, Snow DH, Adams S.No abstract available
Comparative digestion of timothy (Phleum pratense) fibre by ruminants, equines and rabbits.
The British journal of nutrition    March 1, 1982   Volume 47, Issue 2 267-272 doi: 10.1079/bjn19820035
Udén P, Van Soest PJ.1. The abilities of cattle, sheep, goats, equines and rabbits to digest mature timothy (Phleum pratense) hay were compared. Apparent digestibilities were partitioned into true digestibility, metabolic faecal output (MFO) and fibre digestibility. The aid of the study was to determine the relative effects of fermentation site (among groups) and of body-weight (within groups) on the efficiency of digestion. 2. The ruminants were superior to equines, which were in turn superior to rabbits, in digesting fibre-components of the hay. A large individual variation in digestibility was noted only for th...
[Prececal and postileal digestibility of elements (Ca, P, Mg) and trace elements (Cu, Zn, Mn) in the horse].
Fortschritte in der Tierphysiologie und Tierernahrung    January 1, 1982   Volume 13 61-69 
Meyer H, Schmidt M, Lindemann G, Muuss H.No abstract available
The use of inert markers in the measurement of the digestibility of cubed concentrates and of hay given in several proportions to the pony, horse and white rhinoceros (Diceros simus).
Comparative biochemistry and physiology. A, Comparative physiology    January 1, 1982   Volume 72, Issue 1 77-83 doi: 10.1016/0300-9629(82)90013-5
Frape DL, Tuck MG, Sutcliffe NH, Jones DB.1. The rate of passage of chromic oxide (Cr) was similar in the pony and rhinoceros. 2. Higher apparent amounts digested were found using 4N-HCl-insoluble ash (AIA) than those determined by Cr, but overall digestibilities were similar for the two species. 3. An abrupt increase in the starch content of the horse diets increased the number of faecal ciliate protozoa. Only when the overall feed intake was increased in horses receiving a high dietary proportion of starch were the numbers depressed. 4. When the rhinoceros received 109 kJ apparent DE per kg bodyweight daily (716 kJ/W0.75 daily) it m...
[Straw-mixed feed as “single feed” for horses].
Zeitschrift fur Tierphysiologie, Tierernahrung und Futtermittelkunde    January 1, 1981   Volume 45, Issue 3 113-121 
Drepper K, Staun H, Schougaard H, Thomsen L.No abstract available
Investigation of chromium, cerium and cobalt as markers in digesta. Rate of passage studies.
Journal of the science of food and agriculture    July 1, 1980   Volume 31, Issue 7 625-632 doi: 10.1002/jsfa.2740310702
Udén P, Colucci PE, Van Soest PJ.No abstract available
[Effect of the distribution of hay and cereals on the cellulolytic activity in the large intestine of the pony].
Reproduction, nutrition, developpement    January 1, 1980   Volume 20, Issue 5B 1685-1689 
Tisserand JL, Ottin Pecchio M, Rollin G.The cellulolytic activity in the large intestine of the pony varies according to the form and the composition of the feed. This activity was measured on two caecal and ventral colon-cannulated ponies receiving the following 4 diets during four successive 6-week periods: --6 kg of hay, --4 kg of hay + 1 kg of oats, --6 kg of ground, pelleted hay. --5 kg of a ground, pelleted blend of 80 p. 100 hay and 20 p. 100 oats. Adding oats to a hay feed increased the cellulolytical activity in the caecum and the colon, whereas grinding and pelleting hay alone or hay enriched with oats diminished that acti...
[Digestibility and tolerance of different feed stuffs: investigations on typhiektomized ponies (author’s transl)].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    October 5, 1979   Volume 86, Issue 10 384-390 
Meyer H, Pferdekamp M, Huskamp B.No abstract available
A technique for the conduct of nutritional balance experiments in horses.
Equine veterinary journal    October 1, 1979   Volume 11, Issue 4 232-234 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1979.tb01352.x
McKenzie RA, Blaney BJ, Gartner RJ, Dillon RD, Standfast NF.Standardbred geldings were used in a number of nutritional balance experiments. These consisted of 28-day cycles each of an 18-day equilibration period in yards and a 10-day settling and collection period in metabolism crates. The crates were made of galvanised metal tubing over wooden flooring covered by rubber matting and rubber sheets. Total faeces were collected in trays at the rear of crates and total urine by canvas funnels slung beneath the sheath of each horse.
Seasonal variations in the nutrition of horses at grass.
Equine veterinary journal    October 1, 1978   Volume 10, Issue 4 260-266 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1978.tb02277.x
Owen JM, McCullagh KG, Crook DH, Hinton M.No abstract available
Inhibition of calcium absorption in ponies fed diets containing oxalic acid.
American journal of veterinary research    October 1, 1978   Volume 39, Issue 10 1621-1623 
Swartzman JA, Hintz HF, Schryver HF.The effects of dietary oxalic acid on absorption, excretion, and retention of calcium was determined in Shetland ponies in 2 experiments. In each experiment, the results of feeding a control diet consisting of oats, molasses, and a complete pelleted horse ration were compared with those of feeding the control diet plus 1% oxalic acid. The diets contained 0.6% calcium in the 1st experiment and 0.45% calcium in the 2nd experiment. Oxalic acid increased the fecal excretion of calcium and decreased calcium absorption. The endogenous fecal excretion of calcium determined in the 1st experiment, usin...
Nutritional problems in horses.
Modern veterinary practice    May 1, 1978   Volume 59, Issue 5 395-396 
No abstract available
Response to dietary nitrogen in ponies.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1978   Volume 10, Issue 1 65-68 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1978.tb02219.x
Reitnour CM.Utilisation of nitrogen was studied in 4 crossbred ponies. A latin square design was used to study the effects of corn gluten meal, casein or urea when added to a low protein basal diet. Apparent nitrogen digestion, nitrogen retention, total plasma protein, plasma urea and plasma-free amino acids were measured. The addition of corn gluten meal, casein or urea to the basal ration increased apparent digestion of nitrogen. Casein produced a significantly greater (P less than 0.05) nitrogen retention than corn gluten meal or urea. Plasma urea nitrogen increased significantly (P less than 0.01) in ...