Dietary Protein Moderates Acid-Base Responses to Repeated Sprints in Exercising Horses

Restricting dietary protein may reduce endogenous acid load. Horses were fed diets with 10% supplemental corn oil in experiment one and either 0% or 10% supplemental corn oil in experiment two. Also, low protein (7.5% crude protein, LP) fortified with .5% lysine and .3% threonine or high protein (14...

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Main Author: Graham-Thiers, Patricia M.
Other Authors: Animal and Poultry Sciences
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/40428
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-121798-124307/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-404282021-10-09T05:25:47Z Dietary Protein Moderates Acid-Base Responses to Repeated Sprints in Exercising Horses Graham-Thiers, Patricia M. Animal and Poultry Sciences Kronfeld, David S. Herbein, Joseph H. Jr. Williams, Jay H. Dunnington, E. Ann Lawrence, Larry A. Sklan, David S. protein exercise acid-base Restricting dietary protein may reduce endogenous acid load. Horses were fed diets with 10% supplemental corn oil in experiment one and either 0% or 10% supplemental corn oil in experiment two. Also, low protein (7.5% crude protein, LP) fortified with .5% lysine and .3% threonine or high protein (14.5% crude protein, HP) was fed. Horses underwent similar interval training and standard exercise tests. In experiment two, horses performed an SET prior to conditioning. The SET consisted of warm ups at the walk and trot followed by six repeated sprints and concluding with a 30 minute recovery at the walk. All sprints were at 10 m/s except the SET prior to conditioning in experiment two, which were at 7 m/s. Blood samples were taken every two weeks and as part of SETs. Samples were analyzed for pH, pCO₂, pO2, Na⁺, K⁺, Cl⁻, lactate, total protein (TP), albumin, creatinine and plasma urea-N (PUN). Bicarbonate, strong ion difference (SID) and total weak acids (Atot) were calculated. Plasma urea-N concentrations were higher in the HP group. Plasma creatinine was not different in experiment one but was higher in the LPHF group in experiment two. Also, the LPHF group had a low body condition score and the same weight therefore had a higher lean body mass. Plasma albumin was not different in either experiment and TP was not different in experiment one. Total protein was higher in the HF groups in experiment two. Protein moderated acid-base responses to SETs in both experiments. The LP group had higher pH and bicarbonate levels as well as a tendency for a higher SID in experiment one and in the SET prior to conditioning for experiment two. Lower lactate levels were observed in the LP group in experiment one. Following conditioning in experiment two, the LP group had higher pH and bicarbonate levels but only combined with HF. Restricting dietary protein can increase pH and bicarbonate levels and high fat has been shown to improve fatty acid oxidation and spare muscle glycogen. Therefore, restricting dietary protein especially in combination with high fat may be beneficial for the exercising horse. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T21:23:28Z 2014-03-14T21:23:28Z 1998-11-30 1998-12-17 1999-12-18 1998-12-18 Dissertation etd-121798-124307 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/40428 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-121798-124307/ en ch4a.pdf imp.pdf ch3.pdf ch3a.pdf ch2.pdf title.pdf figures.pdf contents.pdf ch5a.pdf ch1.pdf abstract.pdf ACKN.PDF PVITA.PDF ch5.pdf ch5b.pdf ch4.pdf tables.pdf litcited.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic protein
exercise
acid-base
spellingShingle protein
exercise
acid-base
Graham-Thiers, Patricia M.
Dietary Protein Moderates Acid-Base Responses to Repeated Sprints in Exercising Horses
description Restricting dietary protein may reduce endogenous acid load. Horses were fed diets with 10% supplemental corn oil in experiment one and either 0% or 10% supplemental corn oil in experiment two. Also, low protein (7.5% crude protein, LP) fortified with .5% lysine and .3% threonine or high protein (14.5% crude protein, HP) was fed. Horses underwent similar interval training and standard exercise tests. In experiment two, horses performed an SET prior to conditioning. The SET consisted of warm ups at the walk and trot followed by six repeated sprints and concluding with a 30 minute recovery at the walk. All sprints were at 10 m/s except the SET prior to conditioning in experiment two, which were at 7 m/s. Blood samples were taken every two weeks and as part of SETs. Samples were analyzed for pH, pCO₂, pO2, Na⁺, K⁺, Cl⁻, lactate, total protein (TP), albumin, creatinine and plasma urea-N (PUN). Bicarbonate, strong ion difference (SID) and total weak acids (Atot) were calculated. Plasma urea-N concentrations were higher in the HP group. Plasma creatinine was not different in experiment one but was higher in the LPHF group in experiment two. Also, the LPHF group had a low body condition score and the same weight therefore had a higher lean body mass. Plasma albumin was not different in either experiment and TP was not different in experiment one. Total protein was higher in the HF groups in experiment two. Protein moderated acid-base responses to SETs in both experiments. The LP group had higher pH and bicarbonate levels as well as a tendency for a higher SID in experiment one and in the SET prior to conditioning for experiment two. Lower lactate levels were observed in the LP group in experiment one. Following conditioning in experiment two, the LP group had higher pH and bicarbonate levels but only combined with HF. Restricting dietary protein can increase pH and bicarbonate levels and high fat has been shown to improve fatty acid oxidation and spare muscle glycogen. Therefore, restricting dietary protein especially in combination with high fat may be beneficial for the exercising horse. === Ph. D.
author2 Animal and Poultry Sciences
author_facet Animal and Poultry Sciences
Graham-Thiers, Patricia M.
author Graham-Thiers, Patricia M.
author_sort Graham-Thiers, Patricia M.
title Dietary Protein Moderates Acid-Base Responses to Repeated Sprints in Exercising Horses
title_short Dietary Protein Moderates Acid-Base Responses to Repeated Sprints in Exercising Horses
title_full Dietary Protein Moderates Acid-Base Responses to Repeated Sprints in Exercising Horses
title_fullStr Dietary Protein Moderates Acid-Base Responses to Repeated Sprints in Exercising Horses
title_full_unstemmed Dietary Protein Moderates Acid-Base Responses to Repeated Sprints in Exercising Horses
title_sort dietary protein moderates acid-base responses to repeated sprints in exercising horses
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/40428
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-121798-124307/
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