Colostrum - An Exceptional Superfood for Animals and Humans!
Colostrum you know it as the mares first milk. It is a complex fluid rich in nutrients and immuneregulating compounds all designed to give the newborn foal the immune support he needs to thrive. Unlike humans who are born with an initial level of immunity newborn horses do not benefit from any placental transfer of immunoglobulins therefore they must consume colostrum in the first few hours of life in order to survive.
It is fascinating to note that animal species can be divided into three classes based on the way immunoglobulins are transferred to newborns 1 via placental transfer to the fetus before birth primates including humans rabbits and guinea pigs 2 through both placental transfer and through mammary gland secretion of colostrum rats mice cats and dogs 3 strictly from mammary secretions ungulates such as horses pigs cows sheep and goats. Though human babies absorb only a very small amount of immunoglobulins from the small intestine the presence of immunoglobulins throughout the gastrointestinal tract will bind bacteria toxins and other macromolecules inhibiting their ability to be absorbed into the blood stream thereby improving the immune response.
I was skeptical at first. After all immunoglobulins found in colostrum are very large proteins far too large to be absorbed directly into the bloodstream at an advanced age. Even newborn foals are best able to absorb these macromolecules only within the first six to eight hours of life. After that the intestinal cells gradually stop absorbing immunoglobulins a process known as closure. I reasoned that in adult animals these proteins must be digested starting in the stomach and later in the small intestine resulting in pieces of the original certainly not the entire immunoglobulin. Well it turns out that I was only partially correct.
Bovine colostrum is the best choice
Colostrum from cows is