Dietary fat affects heat production and other variables of equine performance, under hot and humid conditions.
Abstract: Does dietary fat supplementation during conditioning improve athletic performance, especially in the heat? Fat adaptation has been used to increase energy density, decrease bowel bulk and faecal output and reduce health risks associated with hydrolysable carbohydrate overload. It may also reduce spontaneous activity and reactivity (excitability), increase fatty acid oxidation, reduce CO2 production and associated acidosis, enhance metabolic regulation of glycolysis, improve both aerobic and anaerobic performance and substantially reduce heat production. A thermochemical analysis of ATP generation showed the least heat release during the direct oxidation of long chain fatty acids, which have a 3% advantage over glucose and 20 to 30% over short chain fatty acids and amino acids. Indirect oxidation via storage as triglyceride increased heat loss during ATP generation by 3% for stearic acid, 65% for glucose and 174% for acetic acid. Meal feeding and nutrient storage, therefore, accentuates the advantage of dietary fat. A calorimetric model was based on initial estimates of net energy for competitive work (10.76 MJ for the Endurance Test of an Olympic level 3-day-event), other work (14.4 MJ/day) and maintenance (36 MJ), then applied estimates of efficiencies to derive associated heat productions for the utilisation of 3 diets, Diet A: hay (100), Diet B: hay and oats (50:50) and Diet C: hay, oats and vegetable oil (45:45:10), the difference between the last 2 diets representing fat adaptation. During a 90.5 min speed and stamina test, heat production was estimated as 37, 35.4 and 34.6 MJ for the 3 diets, respectively, an advantage 0.8 MJ less heat load for the fat adapted horse, which would reduce water needed for evaporation by 0.33 kg and reduce body temperature increase by about 0.07 degree C. Total estimated daily heat production was 105, 93 and 88 MJ for the 3 diets, respectively, suggesting a 5 MJ advantage for the fat adapted horse (Diet C vs. Diet B). Estimated intake energy was 348, 269 and 239 MJ for the 3 diets, respectively, and corresponding daily intakes as fed were 22.2, 16.6 and 12.9 kg, an advantage of 3.7 kg for the fat adapted horse. Water requirement was estimated to decrease by about 6 kg/day in the fat adapted horse: 4 kg less faecal water output and 2 kg less water for evaporation. This model indicated that the fat supplemented diet reduced daily heat load by 5%, feed intake by 22%, faecal output (and bowel ballast) by 31% and water requirement by 12%. The advantage of fat supplementation over hay and oats was in general about half that gained by hay and oats over hay alone.
Publication Date: 1996-07-01 PubMed ID: 8894547DOI: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1996.tb05028.xGoogle Scholar: Lookup
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- Journal Article
- Research Support
- Non-U.S. Gov't
- Review
Summary
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This research investigates the impacts of dietary fat on horse performance in hot and humid conditions, finding that dietary fat supplementation has several benefits including decreased heat production and reduced feed and water intake.
Research Objectives
- The study focuses on analyzing whether supplementing a horse’s diet with additional fat improves their athletic performance, especially in hot, humid conditions.
- The researchers conduct a thermochemical analysis of ATP production to investigate heat production, which is directly associated with dietary intake.
- Three different diets were tested: hay only (Diet A), hay and oats (Diet B), and hay, oats, and vegetable oil (Diet C), with the vegetable oil serving as the fat supplement in the third diet.
- An attempt was made to determine how dietary fat supplements impacted variables such as heat production, feed intake, faecal output, and water requirement.
Research Process
- A calorimetric model was used to calculate heat production for the three diets during an endurance test, and for maintenance and other work.
- Heat generated during ATP production was analyzed for different nutrients, showing that long-chain fatty acids contributed the least heat and emphasized the advantage of dietary fat.
- The horses were put through a 90.5-minute speed and stamina test, and the heat production, water requirement for evaporation, and estimated increase in body temperature of the horses fed with each diet were recorded.
Research Findings
- Diet C, which incorporated vegetable oil for fat supplementation, showed the least heat production, lowest feed intake, reduced faecal output, and decreased water requirement. The reduced heat production also meant less water was needed for cooling via evaporation.
- Compared to the other dietary plans, the fat-adapted horse on Diet C had about 0.8 MJ less heat load, indicating an advantage in hot conditions. This reduced heat load required 0.33 kg less of evaporation water and decreased the body’s temperature increase by approximately 0.07°C.
- Fat supplementation in the diets resulted in a 5% reduction in daily heat load, a 22% reduction in feed intake, 31% less faecal output, and a 12% reduction in water requirement.
Conclusion
- The study stipulates that supplementing the horse’s diet with additional fat, especially under hot, humid conditions, enhances their performance. The benefits highlighted include an increased energy density, reduced bowel bulk and faecal output, and mitigated health risks related to carbohydrate overload.
- The benefits of fat supplementation were roughly half that of supplementing with hay and oats over hay alone.
Cite This Article
APA
Kronfeld DS.
(1996).
Dietary fat affects heat production and other variables of equine performance, under hot and humid conditions.
Equine Vet J Suppl(22), 24-34.
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.2042-3306.1996.tb05028.x Publication
Researcher Affiliations
- Department of Animal and Poultry Sciences, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg 24061-0306, USA.
MeSH Terms
- Adenosine Triphosphate / metabolism
- Animal Feed
- Animals
- Avena
- Body Temperature Regulation
- Diet / veterinary
- Dietary Fats / administration & dosage
- Dietary Fats / metabolism
- Digestion
- Energy Intake
- Energy Metabolism
- Horses / metabolism
- Hot Temperature
- Humidity
- Models, Biological
- Poaceae
- Water / metabolism
References
This article includes 40 references
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