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Sugar Promotes Chronic Inflammation

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Inflammation. The very word triggers images of pain, redness and swelling. But in the case of injury or infection, acute inflammation is actually a beneficial means of restoring the body to health. Specific cells are called into action to remove the source of injury or infection and repair damaged tissue. It’s when inflammation becomes chronic that areas of the body may lose function. Any part of the body can be impacted by inflammation, including joints, feet, lungs, muscles, skin, digestive tract, reproductive function, heart, nervous system, pancreas, liver, as well as the hypothalamic brain centers responsible for releasing dopamine and recognizing leptin.

This article focuses on the inflammatory impact that sugar has on your horse’s health. There are several other causes of inflammation, such as stress and obesity, high dietary levels of linoleic acid (an omega 6), free-radical consumption from poorly stored fatty feeds, and trans fat (partially hydrogenated oils); however, the damaging impact of high sugar/high starch diets is commonplace. Sweet feeds and diets high in cereal grains (e.g., oats, barley, corn, wheat, rice, and millet) can lead to health problems over time. Research suggests that this type of diet actually promotes high blood concentrations of pro-inflammatory molecules known as cytokines.

Cytokines can be Problematic

Two cytokines in particular, known as interleukin (IL)-1? and IL-6, are stimulated by insulin secretion in response to elevated blood glucose from sugar and starch digestion.i Furthermore, overconsumption of oats or other starchy feed, beyond what is digested in the small intestine, can result in hindgut microbial fermentation to organic acids, lowering the cecal pH,iiand increasing blood lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Elevated LPS induces insulin resistance and increases proinflammatory cytokines.iii These scenarios start a cycle of whole-body, low-grade chronic inflammation that further exacerbates insulin resistance. Even the healthy horse may develop endocrine-related disorders as he ages.

In addition to cytokines, hyperglycemia (high blood glucose) also causes the body to generate inflammatory free radicals. These highly volatile, destructive molecules can overwhelm the horse’s antioxidant defenses, alter DNA, accelerate aging, and lead to diseases throughout the body, including the cell’s lessened sensitivity to key hormones.

Signs of Low-Grade, Chronic Inflammation

Regional fat deposits (along the neck, down the spine, tail head, shoulders, chest, or even above the eyes) are a clear indication of insulin resistance. Elevated insulin equates with inflammation and can create health issues such as laminitis and leptin resistance. Behaviorally, horses can become lethargic. Research with humans and laboratory animals describes the profound effects of inflammatory cytokines on the brain and behavior, manifesting itself as depression and fatigue.iv In horses, such symptoms are common in pituitary pars intermedia dysfunction (PPID), commonly referred to as equine Cushing’s disease, and worsen as the brain’s dopamine-releasing neurons experience progressively more damage.v

Fructose–Another Concern

Fructose is a monosaccharide generated from digestion of sucrose, found in molasses, honey, and other sugars typically used to sweeten feeds. Fructose has the ability to induce metabolic syndrome in laboratory animal.vi It also has been shown to induce leptin resistance in rats.vii Its unique metabolic pathway may be responsible for this deleterious impact. Fructose is absorbed from the small intestine, and transported to the liver, where it is metabolized by the enzyme fructokinase C to generate a metabolite called fructose-1-phosphate, leading to a series of events that induce oxidative stress in the liver as well as insulin resistance,viii potentially leading to laminitis.

Pasture and hay, particularly cool season forages (e.g., timothy, brome, fescue, orchardgrass) contain a polymer known as fructan–a polysaccharide in which many fructose molecules are linked together. The horse does not produce enzymes capable of digesting fructans; however, bacteria within the small intestine may be capable of breaking apart large fructan molecules into individual fructose monosaccharides.ix It is speculated that metabolism of elevated fructose within the small intestine may lead to intestinal permeability and endotoxin-related laminitis.x

We have always understood fructan-related laminitis to be caused by the production of lactic acid in the hindgut as the microbial flora ferment large amounts of fructans from grasses. True, research studies have induced fructan-related laminitis; however they used a type of fructan (inulin) not significantly found in grasses, and at dosages that far exceeded what can reasonably be consumed in a natural grazing setting.xi This leads us to believe that fructans do not have a significant impact on laminitis risk, after all. On the other hand, other research has shown that lactic acid is, in fact, produced when hindgut microbes are exposed to the type of fructans more readily found in grasses (levans) in an in vitro setting.xii Therefore, the true impact of fructans on laminitis risk remains to be investigated.

Don’t Let Your Horse Get Fat

Cytokines from excess body fatxiiican damage the areas within the hypothalamus that recognize leptin, which normally tells the horse he has had enough to eat.xiv Consequently, the appetite does not decrease; instead the horse keeps on eating, getting more obese, producing more cytokines, increasing inflammatory damage to the hypothalamus, resulting in greater leptin resistance. Cytokines also lead to inflammation within the hoof, and therefore, are likely involved in obesity-associated laminitis.xv

If your horse is already overweight, take measures to help him slim down.xvi These must include reducing stress, allowing access to appropriate forage at all times, increasing physical movement, and including an anti-inflammatory diet that is low in sugar/starch and high in antioxidants.

Approaches to Reduce Sugar/Starch Intake

If your horse is athletic and in good condition, watch his sugar/starch intake; it will protect him as he gets older. If your horse is suffering from insulin resistance, is laminitic or cushingoid, make a concerted effort to make changes. Here are some to consider:

  • Eliminate sweet feeds.
  • Reserve cereal grains for the equine athlete, and only at a minimal level.
  • Avoid supplements and treats that contain added sugar and starch.
  • Choose beet pulp, hay pellets, or protein sources as carriers for supplements.
  • Test your hay for its sugar/starch content.xvii
  • Test your pasture at various times of day and seasons.xviii
  • Soak hay, if necessary, to remove excess sugars and fructans (be sure to add a vitamin/mineral supplement to replace nutrients lost by soaking).

Can Oats be a Part of a Healthy Horse’s Diet?

Oats are more than 50% starch, which, when digested down to glucose in the foregut (small intestine), provide the horse with an instant source of energy to fuel anaerobic activities (such as speed events). Energy for endurance best comes from fat, which is metabolized aerobically. The two are actually needed together–glucose serves as the “kindling” to light the fire under fat metabolism. But the horse does not need to rely on a starchy feed to obtain glucose; forages contain simple sugars (denoted as ethanol soluble carbohydrates–ESC) as well as starch.

The athletic horse who requires more calories than forages can provide can benefit from a small amount of whole oats (no more than 2 pounds or 0.9 kg at a time). Whole oats are a clean feed, and less subject to oxidative rancidity than rolled or steamed oats. Beyond oats, additional energy needs can be met by fibrous feeds such as beet pulp and soybean hulls, as well as fat and protein sources including rice bran, ground flaxseeds, chia seeds, copra meal and pea protein.

Keys to an Anti-Inflammatory Diet

Dietary approaches to reducing inflammation will help your horse regain tissue function. The first step is to reduce sugar and starch. Here’s more:

  • Avoid soybean, safflower, corn, and wheat germ oils. Inflammatory omega 6s make up the majority of their fatty acid content.
  • Add ground flaxseeds or moistened chia seeds to provide omega 3s.xix
  • Include antioxidants such as vitamins E and C, as well as lipoic acid, grapeseed extract, spirulina, boswellia, and curcumin, especially if hay is the predominant forage for your horse.
  • Include a variety of protein sources to boost overall protein quality.This allows for tissue synthesis and repair.

Don’t Neglect Exercise

Exercise reduces inflammation by making cells more receptive to insulin and leptin, allowing the horse to burn fat and eat less. Grazing on large expanses of land allows for constant movement. But even short bursts of exercise have benefits.

Bottom Line

Major health issues, including obesity, insulin resistance, PPID and laminitis are precipitated and maintained by low-grade, chronic inflammation which can be caused by long-term consumption of feeds high in sugar and starch. Forages, as the foundation of the diet, supply sufficient energy for the maintenance horse. Athletic horses do best when energy needs are met through minimal starch intake combined with digestible fibers, fatty food sources and a variety of proteins.

Juliet M. Getty, PhD, is an independent equine nutritionist with a wide U.S. and international following. Her research-based approach optimizes equine health by aligning physiology and instincts with correct feeding and nutrition practices. Find a world of useful information for the horseperson at www.GettyEquineNutrition.com: Sign up for Getty’s informative, free e-newsletter, Forage for Thought; browse her library of reference articles; search her nutrition forum; and purchase recordings of her educational teleseminars. Reach Getty directly at gettyequinenutrition@gmail.com. She is available for private consultations and speaking engagements.

i Suagee, J.K., Splain, R.K., Swyers, K.L., Geor, R.J., and Corl, B.A., 2015. Effects of high-sugar and high-starch diets on postprandial inflammatory protein concentrations in horses. Journal of Equine Veterinary Science, 35(3), 191-197.
ii Milinovich, G.J., Burrell, P.C., Pollitt, C.C., Klieve, A.V., et. al., 2008. Microbial ecology of the equine hindgut during oligofructose-induced laminitis. ISME Journal (2), 1089-1100.
iii Wearn, J.G., Suagee, J.K., Crisman, M.V., Corl, B.A., et. al., Effects of the insulin sensitized drug, pioglitazone, and lipopolysaccharide administration on markers of systemic inflammation and clinical parameters in horses. Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology, 145, 42-49.
iv Felger, J.C., and Miller, A.H., 2012. Effects on the basal ganglia and dopamine function: The subcortical source of inflammatory malaise. Front Neuroendocrinology, 33(3): 315–327.
v McFarlane, D., Donaldson, M.T., Saleh, T.M., and Cribb, A.E., 2003. The role of dopaminergic neurodegeneration in equine pituitary pars intermedia dysfunction (Equine Cushing’s disease), 49th Annual convention of the American Association of Equine Practitioners, New Orleans, Louisiana.
vi Johnson, R.J., Perez-Pozo, S.E., Sautin, Y.Y., Manitus, J., et. al., 2009. Hypothesis: Could excessive fructose intake and uric acid cause type 2 diabetes? Endocrinology Review, 30, 96-116.
vii Shapiro, A., Mu, W., Roncal, C., Cheng, K.Y., et. al., 2008. Fructose-induced leptin resistance exacerbates weight gain in response to subsequent high-fat feeding. American Journal of Physiology, 295, R1370-1375.
viii Ishimoto, T., Lanaspa, M., Le, M., Diggle, C.P., et. al., 2012. Opposing effects of fructokinase C and A isoforms on fructose-induced metabolic syndrome. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. In press.
ix Singh, P., and Gill, P.K., 2006. Production of inulinases: Recent advances. Food Technology and Biotechnology. 44, 151-162.
x Johnson, R.J., Rivard, C., Lanaspa, M.A., Otabachian-Smith, S., et. al., 2013. Fructokinase, fructans, intestinal permeability, and metabolic syndrome: An equine connection?, 33(2), 120-126.
xi Crawford, C., Sepulveda, M.F., Elliott, J., Harris, P.A., and Bailey, S.R., 2006. Dietary fructan carbohydrate increases amine production in the equine large intestine: Implications for pasture-associated laminitis. Journal of Animal Science, 85(11), 2949-2958.
xii Ince, J.C., Longland, A.C., Moore-Colyer, M.J.S., and Harris, P.A., 2014. In vitro degradation of grass fructan by equid gastrointestinal digesta. Grass and Forage Science, 69(3), 514-523.
xiii Wisse, B., 2004. The inflammatory syndrome: The roles of adipose tissue cytokines in metabolic disorders linked to obesity. Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, 15(11), 2792-2800.
xiv De Git, K.C., and Adan, R.A., 2015. Leptin resistance in diet-induced obesity: The role of hypothalamic inflammation. World Obesity, (16(3), 207-224.
xv Faleiros, R.R., Leise; B.S., Watts, M., et al., 2011. Laminar chemokine mRNA concentrations in horses with carbohydrate overload-induced laminitis. Veterinary Immunology Immunopathology, 144: 45–51.
xvi Getty, J.M., 2013. The Easy Keeper – Making it Easy to Keep Him Healthy. Spotlight on Equine Nutrition Series: http://gettyequinenutrition.biz/TeleSeminars/TeleseminarBooks/SpotlightonEquineNutritionTeleseminarSeries.htm
xvii Getty, J.M., 2014. Do you need to analyze your hay? http://gettyequinenutrition.biz/Library/doyouneedtoanalyzeyourhay.htm
xviii Getty, J.M., 2013. Testing your pasture – For peace of mind. http://gettyequinenutrition.biz/Library/testingyourpastureforpeaceofmind.htm
xix Getty, J.M. 2012. Fat is fat, right? Balance your omegas. http://gettyequinenutrition.biz/Library/FatisFat.htm


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