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To: PayNoAttentionManBehindCurtain
Ulcers Demand Your Attention And they get it. In advertising. In barn chatter. Even in veterinary offices. No matter how you look at it, though, symptomatic relief may help.

A horse who has an unusual change in attitude or becomes touchy around their abdomen may have an ulcer.

You’ve read the ads, seen the endoscope studies results and heard the talk: Gastric ulcers are incredibly common in domesticated horses. The incidence is higher in heavily stressed horses, like racehorses and endurance horses, but ulcers are being found in quiet horses that seem to have a plain, ordinary, easy life, too.

If your horse doesn’t quite seem like himself at times, not colicky, but definitely somehow uncomfortable, he may be battling an ulcer. Or maybe he doesn’t eat with the enthusiasm he used to have, or just lacks the “spirit” he used to have. You’ve ruled out other possibilities and are left to face the fact that you may well be seeing the symptoms of a chronic gastro-intestinal (GI)-related problem, such as an ulcer.

Risk factors for developing ulcers include:

• Stall confinement.

• Sporadic feeding rather than constant access to grass.

• Exercise faster than a walk. (This causes enough rise in abdominal pressure to cause some acid movement into the unprotected areas of the stomach. The faster the horse moves, the more pressure and back wash of acid.)

• Feeding processed feeds rather than whole grains.

• Prolonged fasting (e.g. long trips, long period of time between last feed of the day and the morning feed).

• Any problem elsewhere in the gastrointestinal tract.

• Use of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and corticosteroids.

The only way to definitively diagnose gastric ulcers is to examine the stomach directly with an endoscope at a veterinary clinic or do a sucrose-absorption test (see sidebar). However, most horses are “diagnosed” by symptoms only.

Signs most suggestive of gastric ulcer include:

• Grinding of the teeth. • Belching noises. • Slow eating, often walking away without finishing meals all at once. • Picky appetite that includes the horse refusing foods or supplements that were consumed readily before.

These symptoms aren’t diagnostic of ulcers, but they do suggest discomfort associated with the upper GI tract/stomach. Less-specific signs frequently attributed to ulcers are:

• Sour, sulky attitude. • Poor coat. • Weight loss. • Poor performance. • Irritability. • Sensitivity to touch around the horse's lower belly/sternum area.

Since the signs and symptoms are nonspecific—and overlap quite a bit with other causes of low-grade intestinal-tract discomfort and with pain from any cause—ulcers may be blamed when another problem is actually the cause. It’s important to involve your veterinarian in the diagnosis and treatment.

Plenty of turnout—time for a horse to be a horse—is important to your horse’s health.

While horses can develop some degree of gastric ulceration easily and under a wide variety of conditions, ulcers can and do heal spontaneously. On a scale of 1 to 3, with 1 being only obvious reddening of the stomach lining and 3 is a deep ulcer, a horse with a grade 3 ulcer is more likely to actually have symptoms as a result and definitely requires treatment, while a grade 1 stomach irritation could be symptom-free and resolve on its own.

Exercise As A Risk Factor Studies performed at the University of Florida have shown that horses moving at a rate faster than a walk experience increased abdominal pressure that essentially back flushes highly acidic stomach contents from the lower, acid-producing (glandular) portion of the stomach back to the nonglandular portion. The Florida researchers found that when a horse is standing or walking, the pH of the stomach just inside the junction with the esophagus is in the range of 5 to 6, but as soon as the pace is picked up the acid back flow can drop it to as low as 1.

The more time the horse spends moving around faster than a walk, the greater the exposure of these portions of the stomach to highly acidic conditions. It’s a small wonder that a preliminary study looking for gastric ulceration in endurance horses found lesions in 67%. Most lesions were located in the nonglandular portion, same location as in other performance horses, but 27% also had ulceration in the glandular portion, a condition that is usually only seen in horses following a critical illness of some type.

Given the prolonged, strenuous exercise it was surprising that more horses did not show ulcers, but common practices on rides may be why. Many endurance riders feed alfalfa, which has an excellent buffering effect in the stomach. Beet pulp is another favorite and remains in the stomach longer than other types of feed. Allowing the horse to stop for water at every opportunity will also at least temporarily dilute the acidity.

121 posted on 03/23/2005 6:08:47 AM PST by Duchess47 ("One day I will leave this world and dream myself to Reality" Crazy Horse)
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To: Duchess47

In humans, garlic has been shown to help heal ulcers. Would it work in a horse?


123 posted on 03/23/2005 6:12:01 AM PST by mommadooo3
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To: Duchess47

Very interesting article.

I remember the last time he did this it was right after I had rode him several days in a row. And this time he got rode last week several times, and altho I didn't feel I was overworking him, his workouts were mostly arena work on barrels. Alot of loping.

He has been turned out nearly everyday. There isn't alot of grass growing, but he has had the turn out time.

Becky


126 posted on 03/23/2005 6:18:20 AM PST by PayNoAttentionManBehindCurtain (Don't be afraid to try: Remember, the ark was built by amateur's, and the Titanic by professional.)
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