Equine Nutrition/Gut health

Reasons for poor gut health

 * Lack of proper roughage
 * Excessive cereal grain
 * Long hours between feeding
 * Long periods of empty stomach

Effects of poor gut health
In the horse, the glandular gastric mucosa continually secretes hydrochloric acid, whether food is present or not. When feed is withheld for as little as 14 hours, the combination of acid, along with bile salts can irritate both the glandular and nonglandular mucosa to the point of ulceration.
 * Diarrhea
 * Colic
 * Decreased performance
 * Decreased energy
 * "Bad" behavior
 * Gastric ulceration

Excess water soluble carbohydrates in the diet, such as Fructan, have been shown to induce cases of laminitis.
 * Laminitis

Practices for healthy guts

 * Provide plenty of quality forage
 * Feed small and frequent
 * Avoid large quantities of cereal grains
 * Provide grazing or forage 24/7 to prevent "empty" stomach

Anatomy of the horse's guts

 * The stomach
 * Glandular(mucus protected, cereal grains..etc)
 * Non-glandular(non protected, hay digested here)
 * Small ~9 liters(needs small and frequent feeding, i.e. grazing)
 * The small intestine
 * Long small tube
 * gas from roughage digestion inflates it and keeps it from twisting
 * Easily tangled while empty( contents digested in ~1 hour)
 * The large intestine
 * Ceacum(fermentation "vat")
 * Large colon(left and right dorsal colons)
 * small colon(left and right ventral colons)
 * uses microbial fermentation to digest forage

Horses have evolved to wander and graze almost continuously 24/7 and it is when we get away from these practices that we run into trouble with gut health.