The incidence and severity of gastric ulceration does not increase in overtrained Standardbred horses.

Equine Vet J Suppl

Department of Equine Sciences, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Utrecht University, The Netherlands.

Published: November 2010

AI Article Synopsis

  • Gastric ulceration can be influenced by factors such as diet, stress, and exercise, with overtraining in horses potentially increasing its incidence.
  • A study involving 12 Standardbred horses over 32 weeks aimed to determine if overtraining leads to more gastric ulcers compared to control horses.
  • Results showed only minor gastric changes with no significant difference in ulcer occurrence between overtrained and control groups, suggesting that overtraining does not increase gastric ulceration and that detraining may help reduce it.

Article Abstract

Reasons For Performing Study: Gastric ulceration can be caused by different pathophysiological mechanisms including dietary factors, psychological stress and exercise. Overtraining is a medical syndrome in performance horses associated with altered hormone levels, altered feed intake, altered behaviour and decreased performance. These components might lead to a higher incidence of gastric ulceration in overtrained horses.

Objectives: To investigate whether the incidence of gastric ulceration is increased in overtrained compared to control horses.

Methods: A longitudinal training study with twelve 1.5 years old Standardbred horses was performed on a treadmill for a total of 32 weeks. Training was divided into 4 periods: (1) acclimatisation (2) training (3) intensified training, and (4) detraining. In period 3, the horses were randomly divided into 2 groups: control (C) and intensified trained group (IT). At the end of each period, gastroscopy was performed in conscious horses after withholding feed for 12 h and water for 6 h using a 3.5 m video gastroendoscope. Lesion scores were assigned to areas of the stomach and graded 1-4. Logistic regression was used for statistical calculations.

Results: Evaluation of the stomach revealed only minor changes (grades 1 or 2) on each occasion. There were no significant differences in gastric lesion scores between groups or periods. Most lesions (70%) were found around the minor curvature. After detraining no lesions (0%) were found in contrast to periods 1 (40%, P = 0.056), 2 (30%) and 3 (30%).

Conclusions: Experimentally-induced overtraining does not increase the incidence of gastric ulceration in normally fed Standardbred horses and detraining appears to reduce gastric ulceration.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.2042-3306.2010.00268.xDOI Listing

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