Equine Health Update EHU Vol 21 Issue 01 | Page 45

Nutrition | EQUINE 30 YEARS OF EQUINE NUTRITION RESEARCH: WHAT HAVE WE LEARNED? Dr. Joe Pagan founded Kentucky Equine Research in 1988 and, in the three decades following, he and his staff have witnessed the evolution of equine nutrition and research trends. Equine nutrition and exercise physiology researcher Joe Pagan, PhD, formed Kentucky Equine Research (KER) in 1988. In the three decades following, he and his staff have witnessed the evolution of equine nutrition and research trends. At KER’s 2018 Conference, held Oct. 29-30 in Lexington, he described the research environment over the past 30 years. Developmental Disorders In 1980s Central Kentucky, the Thoroughbred capital of the world, most equine nutrition research centered around broodmares, growing horses, and performance horses—“the do all and end all” in that region of the country, said Pagan. While things like equine metabolic syndrome (EMS) and geriatric health weren’t yet on scientists’ radars, he said, developmental orthopedic disease (DOD, a catchall phrase for disease affecting the skeleton of growing horses) was. This was primarily because flaws that showed up on the radiographs of yearlings and 2-year-olds at Thoroughbred sales devalued those horses greatly. Veterinarians and researchers were trying to pinpoint DOD’s cause when, in the mid-80s, a bomb was dropped by a group from Ohio State University implying that diets deficient in certain trace minerals were primarily to blame, said Pagan. “A correlation was found between the level of copper (which can disrupt normal bone formation) in a breeding farm’s ration and the incidence of metabolic bone disease (e.g., DOD) in the farm’s foals,” he explained. “Suddenly, copper was all anyone cared about.” The question that followed was: Should we adjust the foal’s diet accordingly or the pregnant mare’s? (Because of the exponential increase in fetal growth during the last three months of gestation, supplementing mares in late pregnancy is one way to stock foals with nutrients.) Out of the “research flare” on this topic came a study in New Zealand that found mare supplementation to be most important to the foal’s bone health. “Since then, the feed industry has universally embraced the importance of trace mineral fortification for broodmare and foal feeds,” said Pagan. Over the next decade, however, DOD continued to be an issue, “especially in precocious, fast-growing young horses,” he said. Because certain bone lesions appeared to • Volume 21 Issue 1 | March 2019 • 45