A forage-only diet alters the metabolic response of horses in training

Most athletic horses are fed a high-starch diet despite the risk of health problems. Replacing starch concentrate with high-energy forage would alleviate these health problems, but could result in a shift in major substrates for muscle energy supply from glucose to short-chain fatty acids (SCFA) due...

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Main Authors: A. Jansson, J.E. Lindberg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2012-01-01
Series:Animal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1751731112000948
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spelling doaj-1e1cec8b6f434f6fa6498e73afea6e182021-06-06T04:47:59ZengElsevierAnimal1751-73112012-01-0161219391946A forage-only diet alters the metabolic response of horses in trainingA. Jansson0J.E. Lindberg1Department of Animal Nutrition and Management, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, SE-750 07 Uppsala, SwedenDepartment of Animal Nutrition and Management, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, SE-750 07 Uppsala, SwedenMost athletic horses are fed a high-starch diet despite the risk of health problems. Replacing starch concentrate with high-energy forage would alleviate these health problems, but could result in a shift in major substrates for muscle energy supply from glucose to short-chain fatty acids (SCFA) due to more hindgut fermentation of fibre. Dietary fat inclusion has previously been shown to promote aerobic energy supply during exercise, but the contribution of SCFA to exercise metabolism has received little attention. This study compared metabolic response with exercise and lactate threshold (VLa4) in horses fed a forage-only diet (F) and a more traditional high-starch, low-energy forage diet (forage–concentrate diet - FC). The hypothesis was that diet F would increase plasma acetate concentration and increase VLa4 compared with diet FC. Six Standardbred geldings in race training were used in a 29-day change-over experiment. Plasma acetate, non-esterified fatty acids (NEFA), lactate, glucose and insulin concentrations and venous pH were measured in samples collected before, during and after a treadmill exercise test (ET, day 25) and muscle glycogen concentrations before and after ET. Plasma acetate concentration was higher before and after exercise in horses on diet F compared with diet FC, and there was a tendency (P = 0.09) for increased VLa4 on diet F. Venous pH and plasma glucose concentrations during exercise were higher in horses on diet F than diet FC, as was plasma NEFA on the day after ET. Plasma insulin and muscle glycogen concentrations were lower for diet F, but glycogen utilisation was similar for the two diets. The results show that a high-energy, forage-only diet alters the metabolic response to exercise and, with the exception of lowered glycogen stores, appears to have positive rather than negative effects on performance traits.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1751731112000948acetateblood pHexerciseinsulinmuscle glycogen
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author A. Jansson
J.E. Lindberg
spellingShingle A. Jansson
J.E. Lindberg
A forage-only diet alters the metabolic response of horses in training
Animal
acetate
blood pH
exercise
insulin
muscle glycogen
author_facet A. Jansson
J.E. Lindberg
author_sort A. Jansson
title A forage-only diet alters the metabolic response of horses in training
title_short A forage-only diet alters the metabolic response of horses in training
title_full A forage-only diet alters the metabolic response of horses in training
title_fullStr A forage-only diet alters the metabolic response of horses in training
title_full_unstemmed A forage-only diet alters the metabolic response of horses in training
title_sort forage-only diet alters the metabolic response of horses in training
publisher Elsevier
series Animal
issn 1751-7311
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Most athletic horses are fed a high-starch diet despite the risk of health problems. Replacing starch concentrate with high-energy forage would alleviate these health problems, but could result in a shift in major substrates for muscle energy supply from glucose to short-chain fatty acids (SCFA) due to more hindgut fermentation of fibre. Dietary fat inclusion has previously been shown to promote aerobic energy supply during exercise, but the contribution of SCFA to exercise metabolism has received little attention. This study compared metabolic response with exercise and lactate threshold (VLa4) in horses fed a forage-only diet (F) and a more traditional high-starch, low-energy forage diet (forage–concentrate diet - FC). The hypothesis was that diet F would increase plasma acetate concentration and increase VLa4 compared with diet FC. Six Standardbred geldings in race training were used in a 29-day change-over experiment. Plasma acetate, non-esterified fatty acids (NEFA), lactate, glucose and insulin concentrations and venous pH were measured in samples collected before, during and after a treadmill exercise test (ET, day 25) and muscle glycogen concentrations before and after ET. Plasma acetate concentration was higher before and after exercise in horses on diet F compared with diet FC, and there was a tendency (P = 0.09) for increased VLa4 on diet F. Venous pH and plasma glucose concentrations during exercise were higher in horses on diet F than diet FC, as was plasma NEFA on the day after ET. Plasma insulin and muscle glycogen concentrations were lower for diet F, but glycogen utilisation was similar for the two diets. The results show that a high-energy, forage-only diet alters the metabolic response to exercise and, with the exception of lowered glycogen stores, appears to have positive rather than negative effects on performance traits.
topic acetate
blood pH
exercise
insulin
muscle glycogen
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1751731112000948
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