Re[2]: Gut sounds

Phil Woods (prw@okway.okstate.edu)
Thu, 12 Dec 1996 14:05:48 -0800

Gut sounds become reduced during a ride, in large part, because of
dehydration, redistribution of body fluids and alterations in body
electrolyte concentrations, not because the horse has a deficiency of
bugs. Adding bugs to the horse may make its gurgling sounds a tad
louder (although I doubt it), but will not improve gastrointestinal
motility or the general clinical picture, ie it is a con to think that
you are improving matters or helping the horse. So if you are giving
probiotics or what-ever merely to get an "A" on gut sounds, I feel
that you are deluding yourself, potentially putting the horse in
danger by trying to mask a lack of gastrointestinal motility, and
effectively using a substance (probiotics) in an attempt to mask the
underlying real status of the horse's gastrointestinal sounds and
hence physiological status of the horse as it proceeds through the
ride ("Cosequin riders"!!!!).

I await the snowstorm.

Phil Woods.

______________________________ Reply Separator _________________________________
Subject: Re: Gut sounds
Author: "Susan F. Evans" <suendavid@worldnet.att.net> at SMTP
Date: 12/12/96 9:22 AM

Joyce Kellenberger wrote:
>
> >
> > How do you get a horse to get better gut sounds?
> > Kris
> We tried probiotics in a paste form at vet checks and that seemed
> to help (for the next vet check.) I now feed my horses ABC probiotic
> supplement a week before the ride, the paste during the ride, and the
> supplement again for a week after. May be overkill, but it has helped a
> lot.


Hi,
I've been a big fan of probiotics for about ten years now, back before
they were on the market for horses but were being commonly fed to dairy
cattle and feeder pigs. I've always thought they helped with keeping a
gut happy, because they increase the population of "bugs" in the gut.
Since stress contributes to killing off the little bugs that carry out
digestion and keep the mail moving, so to speak, it only makes sense
that starting a race with as many bugs as possible is going to help keep
the gut moving and working.

Also, I've noticed my horses recover from a ride much better when they
get probiotics afterwards (actually, I feed it continually, but more so
after a ride). Again, since stress of any kind like racing, trailering,
antibiotics, foaling, disease, whatever can knock down the bug
population, it makes sense to keep the bugs happy by replenishing the
supply.

Just my two cents.

Susan Evans