Eating to Improve Equine Insulin Sensitivity
Do you have an overweight horse? Chances are he is insulin resistant. Excess body fat leads to elevated insulin. Elevated insulin leads to more body fat storage which leads to greater insulin resistance and the vicious cycle continues. Even horses of normal weight can be insulin resistant exhibited by regional fat deposits along the neck shoulders tailhead and back.
The opposite of insulin resistance is insulin sensitivity.
Unlike when humans are sensitive to a food or ingredient meaning intolerant or allergic insulin sensitivity is a good thing. It simply means that the horses cells respond well to insulin and there is no longer a need for the pancreas to continually pump out high levels of this hormone. Storage of body fat normalizes as well as blood sugar levels.
Reduce concentrates but not forage.
Calorie reduction though important should only be accomplished by reducing or even eliminating commercial feeds and