Hold The Sugar: Horses Don’t Benefit From The Sweet Stuff In Electrolytes

As horses exercise, they lose sodium, potassium, and other electrolytes through sweating. These critical substances are necessary to maintain osmotic pressure, fluid balance, and nerve and muscle function.

Electrolyte replacement is called for if horses sweat heavily or for a sustained time. Electrolyte supplements are available in a number of forms including pastes and powders. Some can be administered orally while others are designed to be top-dressed on feed or dissolved in the horse's drinking water.

Owners who taste a pinch of their horses' equine electrolyte supplements may detect a variety of flavors. Some preparations have a distinctly sweet taste, while others are more salty. Sweet mixtures may seem more appealing to the horse owner, but is a sugary supplement what the heavily sweating horse needs to replace the salt and other electrolytes that have been depleted?

An explanation circulating around stables is that the dextrose or other sugars in electrolyte mixtures are included to increase absorption of the other substances contained in the supplement. In an effort to find out if this is true, two studies were conducted at Kentucky Equine Research to evaluate whether sugar inclusion affects electrolyte and water uptake and retention in idle horses.

In the first study, four mature Thoroughbred geldings were used. Three of the horses were dosed with either 92 grams of electrolyte alone, or the electrolyte with either 10 grams or 100 grams of dextrose. For these treatments, the electrolyte was mixed with 1 liter of water and administered by nasogastric tube. The fourth horse was given 1 liter of water as a control. All horses rotated through the trial so that each horse received each treatment.

Blood samples were taken before and four hours after treatment and sodium, potassium, chloride, and glucose were measured. Sodium was significantly elevated post-dosing in all three electrolyte treatments compared to the control, but dextrose did not affect the rate or duration of increase.

In the second study, each horse was given distilled water and a small amount of deuterium oxide (a marker of total body water content). Horses were also treated with additional sodium chloride and potassium chloride; with electrolyte and dextrose; or electrolyte and starch.

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The control horse received only water with deuterium oxide. Blood samples were taken before treatment and one-half, 1, 2, 3, and 4 hours post-dosing, and urine and fecal electrolyte excretion were measured before and for 72 hours after treatment. Blood levels of electrolytes were higher in all three treated horses, but neither dextrose nor starch affected the rate or duration of increase.

These results indicate that adding dextrose or starch to electrolyte mixes does not increase rate of absorption or retention of electrolytes. Dextrose may still have some value in improving palatability of electrolyte mixes, but the higher the dextrose content, the lower the electrolyte content of the product. This means high-dextrose products supply lower amounts of electrolytes per kilogram and may be less effective as a result.

For sugar-free electrolyte supplements, check out the KER electrolyte collection.

Reprinted courtesy of Kentucky Equine Research. Visit ker.com for the latest in equine nutrition and management, and subscribe to Equinews to receive these articles directly.

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Sweat It Out: Three Tips For Equine Electrolyte Supplementation

The sweat that froths and drips from your horse is laced with electrolytes. Profound electrolyte losses occur in exercising horses, often necessitating an electrolyte supplement for optimal athletic performance. Which supplement should you choose, and how much should you offer to ensure electrolytes are being adequately replaced?

“Electrolyte supplements help replace ions lost in sweat during exercise, predominantly sodium, chloride, potassium, and magnesium. Those ions play important roles in an extensive array of metabolic processes, including those involved in nerve and muscle function, and the flow of nutrients into and waste products out of cells,” explained Kathleen Crandell, Ph.D., a Kentucky Equine Research nutritionist.

Consider these three tips when looking for your next electrolyte supplement:

What do I look for in an electrolyte?
Many horses have access to a daily salt supplement, usually in the form of sodium chloride top-dressed onto feed or a free-choice salt block. This, however, should not be considered an electrolyte supplement per se but rather part of a daily ration to meet basic nutritional needs.

“Electrolyte supplements are commercial products; the powders are mixed into feed or water, and the pastes are given orally. Homemade pastes can be created by mixing a powdered supplement with a carrier, such as applesauce or yogurt. Alternatively, some powders can be added to water for the horse to drink as it likes,” described Crandell.

The most important aspect of any quality electrolyte supplement is that the first ingredients be sodium chloride and potassium chloride. Sugar should not be a primary ingredient.

How much electrolyte should I offer?
Various guidelines exist to help owners determine a horse's electrolyte needs, including sweat scores,” relayed Crandell.

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She added, “Horses lose approximately 10 grams of electrolytes per liter of sweat. Under ambient circumstances (not excessively hot, humid, or cold), an average 1,100-pound horse can lose 5 to 7 liters of sweat, including 50 to 70 grams of electrolytes per hour of steady trotting and cantering. As heat and humidity increase, horses can lose up to 10 to 12 liters per hour of sweat. If enough electrolytes are lost, performance will begin to suffer.”

In general, the idea is not to replace all of the electrolytes lost in sweat; about 50 percent will be adequate, as the rest can be derived from the diet. The more the horse sweats, the more electrolytes can be offered.

As a general rule of thumb, offer 1 ounce of electrolytes after an hour of steady sweating.

When do I give electrolyte supplements?
Ideally, horses would begin receiving an electrolyte supplement before exercise. This ensures that horses are well hydrated and have adequate, balanced electrolytes for optimal bodily function.

When offering after exercise, consider that not all horses will readily consume electrolyte-laden water. Paste products would therefore be advantageous in these situations to ensure the product is delivered, but be sure to offer free-choice water with them.

“Don't forget that horses work and sweat in the winter as well. Electrolytes are not just a summer staple,” Crandell added.

Kentucky Equine Research has formulated several electrolyte supplements to conquer ion depletion caused by sweating.

For horses receiving furosemide, Kentucky Equine Research's electrolyte Race Recovery is ideal.

Reprinted courtesy of Kentucky Equine Research. Visit ker.com for the latest in equine nutrition and management, and subscribe to Equinews to receive these articles directly.

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Kentucky Derby Museum Reopens Stable With Miniature Horse Named ‘Mighty Aristides’

Kentucky Derby Museum is thrilled to reopen its Stable and announce the name of its new miniature horse on Friday.

The Stable has been a part of the Museum experience since the Museum opened in 1985, but the live exhibit remained closed the past two years due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Museum has had its sights set on reopening the Stable, spending the last six months searching for the perfect miniature horse to adopt, creating a partnership with the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation, and sprucing up the stable. The Museum requested names from the public, with more than 1,400 names submitted.

The two-year-old, 30-inch tall, roan colored miniature horse will be called, “Mighty Aristides.”

“We are so excited to welcome guests back to visit our beautiful Stable,” said Patrick Armstrong, President & CEO of the Kentucky Derby Museum. “We've gotten to know this little guy since his arrival on Monday, and he is loaded with personality. He's kind, playful, and is very curious! There were hundreds of wonderful names submitted, and Mighty Aristides was a combination of a few different entries. We love that the “Mighty” part of his name reflects his playful personality, and “Aristides” pays homage to the first-ever winner of the Kentucky Derby in 1875. It is our hope that the public will embrace Mighty Aristides and come visit him and our Resident Thoroughbred often.”

Visitors do not need an admission ticket to visit the Museum Stable, visiting the Resident Thoroughbred and miniature horse is free every day during normal Museum hours.

Mighty Aristides was rescued by Meaningful Menagerie Animal Therapy in Louisville when he was five months old. Meaningful Menagerie felt the Kentucky Derby Museum would make a wonderful permanent home for him.

Stable Staff are calling Mighty Aristides “Ari” (pronounced ARE-ee) for short. Currently, Rita's Partner, a retired Thoroughbred Racehorse, is stabled with Ari. The two settled in nicely at the Museum this week, enjoying frozen watermelon as a treat to combat the heat wave and they enjoy twice-a-day strolls on the grounds of Churchill Downs to graze patches of fresh, uncut and untreated grass.

While Ari is here to stay, the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation will switch out the Resident Thoroughbred every few months with a new Thoroughbred visitor for guests to encounter.

Throughout the years, the miniature horse and Thoroughbred have been a special part of romantic engagement proposals, breathtaking wedding photos, thousands of field trips, and each guest's visit to the Museum.

Many people may remember Winston, the Museum's beloved miniature horse, who was an ambassador for 22 years. He was known for appearances around town to help raise money for charities, for honorarily throwing out the first pitch at Louisville Slugger Baseball games, and meeting and greeting people, including sitting Kentucky Governors, on Millionaire's Row. Winston retired from the Museum in 2018, and passed away a few months later. His final resting place is marked by a memorial in the Museum's Oaks Terrace Garden.

It is the hope of Kentucky Derby Museum leaders that Mighty Aristides and the Resident Thoroughbred will help the Museum continue to fulfill its mission to engage, educate and excite everyone about the extraordinary experience that is the Kentucky Derby!

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Study: New Sarcoid Treatment Shows Promise

Sarcoids are the most common type of skin tumor found in horses. They can also be the most frustrating – though rarely life-threatening, they are notoriously difficult to treat, often coming back worse than the original.

A recent study has shown that using a feline interleukin-2 immunomodulator (ALVAC-fIL2) is a promising way to treat equine sarcoids. Interleukin (IL)-2 is used in human medicine to treat cancers like metastatic renal cell carcinoma and metastatic melanomas. It activates a range of T-cells, stimulating cell-mediated immunity. 

The study team, lead by Dr. Corey Saba, used a genetically modified canarypox virus vector to test the theory on 14 horses with sarcoids, but which were otherwise healthy. The modified virus has been used in the production of West Nile and equine influenza vaccines to contain a gene that produces IL-2.

Each horse had their sarcoids measured and photographed, then injected with 1 ml of the ALVAC-fIL2, which was divided over four or five injection sites. The treatment was repeated one, three and seven weeks later.  

The horses were monitored for a year after the final treatment. Researchers found that sarcoid size was reduced in 12 of the 14 horses; seven horses had complete remission and five horses had partial remission. 

The researchers concluded that ALVAC-fIL2 is a safe treatment for sarcoids in horses. 

Read the study here

Read more at Equine Science Update

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