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GI Tract Nutritionist Q&A

4 Responses

Chris Rayfield

Chris Rayfield

October 03, 2023

I have a 4 year old Spotted Saddle Horse that is nearly a perfect horse (in my eyes, ha ha), except for his pooping habits. He is a normally never gets excited, always calm, performs wonderful, trail rides, shows intermittently, has a life of luxury…..etc.
Seemingly perfect life for a horse if you ask me.
He is primarily on pasture all the time, mildly ridden about twice a week, dewormed every 8 weeks.
I would consider him a hard keeper – I never can get him to look full or plump, even with fairly intense feeding with Purina products such as Strategy or Fuel. He just stays on the edge of “thin” all the time.
His backend, tail, rear legs are always messy, but I see him poop normal piles of poop. However, when we trailride or show, he poops SO MUCH almost the whole time we are riding. Starts out a normal pile, then continues small amounts until by the end of the ride it is mush or liquid. He does not show obvious signs of stress – no hyper activity, no bad behavior, he’s not a hyper horse at all, seems SO CALM all the time.
BUT, this pooping problem is concerning (and a little embarrassing).
Is it stress I’m not seeing that’s going on? Is it a gut problem? I would appreciate any suggestions.
Right now he is just on full time pasture, with all the knee high grass he can eat, but it doesn’t really seem to matter what he eats, he stays on the thin side and a messy butt & tail.
Looking forward to your thoughts.
Thank you for your time.
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Horse Guard replied:
Chris,

Thank you for the question. I would recommend adding Gut Guard to his diet. The prebiotics, probiotics, and live yeast cultures should help stabilize the gut flora in his hind gut as well as help with the water fecal syndrome it sounds like he might be experiencing.

I hope this helps. Let me know if I can answer any more questions.

Emily Gunter

Emily Gunter

August 01, 2022

Can I use both gut guard and trifecta for my PSSM horse with some gut/ulcer issues
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Horse Guard replied:
Yes! Trifecta has a gut supplement included, however if you are looking for a stronger approach you can safely feed Gut Guard in addition to Trifecta to your PSSM horse. Let us know if you have any other questions!

 Kelsey Johnson Nonella, Ph.D., PAS

Kelsey Johnson Nonella, Ph.D., PAS

March 17, 2022

Great question! A healthy micro-flora population in the gut has a tremendous positive impact on the overall health of a horse, especially which is especially important during times of stressors such as travel. I recommend adding Gut Guard to your mare’s feeding regiment if she maintains weight well, it will provide her with:
• Probiotics– actual inoculation of live bacteria that help stabilize the gut and resist disease-causing microbes that try to invade the gut and cause illness.
• Prebiotics – These are nutrients to support the probiotics. They help strengthen the good bugs (probiotics) so that they can form stronger populations in the digestive system.
• Live Yeast Cells – Stabilize ceacum pH which further help stabilize the gut. This is extremely important for horses on high starch diets. Research shows that when horses are fed live yeast there is an increase in digestibility resulting in a healthier horse with more resistance to disease.

If your mare is on the harder keeper side instead of Gut Guard you should start Super Weight Gain, note that hauling long distances can be hard on their bodies and it is not uncommon to see them drop weight, we have many athletes that switch to Super Weight Gain during competition season to keep their horses GI’s healthy and weight on, it will provide:
• A complete vitamin-mineral supplement to meet any deficiencies
• The gut supplement in Gut Guard, prebiotics, probiotics, and live yeast cultures to help stabilize the gut flora to help them get more out of the feed they are consuming
• The cool-energy base of full-fat extruded soybeans that are high in protein and fat and low in NSC to help keep weight on safely

If you don’t already, feeding Alfalfa which is high in Calcium can be beneficial for hauling because it buffers the stomach, nature’s tums for horses.

Let us know if you have any questions!

Sincerely,

Kelsey Johnson Nonella, Ph.D., PAS

Kathleen Caligiuri

Kathleen Caligiuri

March 10, 2022

I will be shipping a 14 year old mare across the country and was wondering if I should be giving her a preventative gut supplement prior to shipping?

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