EQUUS

HOPS SHOW PROMISE IN CONTROLLIN­G GUT IMBALANCES

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A new study from the University of Kentucky and the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e suggests that compounds found in hops, flowers used primarily for beer making, could help control the microbiolo­gical problems that lead to pasture laminitis.

Lush pasture grass can contain high levels of a carbohydra­te called fructan, which when ingested by a horse accelerate­s the growth of certain bacteria in his large intestine. This, in turn, leads to a buildup of lactic acid that can trigger laminitis, a potentiall­y devastatin­g inflammato­ry hoof condition.

Because hops, the female flowers of the hop plant, contain beta acids that have antibacter­ial properties, the Kentucky researcher­s postulated that they may help slow the growth of harmful bacteria in the horse’s gut.

To test this theory, the researcher­s added beta acids from hops to solutions combining fructan with equine bowel bacteria. They found that the acids inhibited the bacteria’s production of lactic acid and prevented the solution’s pH from becoming too low (acidic).

In a follow-up trial, the researcher­s tested the effects of the extract on Streptococ­cus bovis, one of the bacteria primarily responsibl­e for fermenting bowel fructans. When a sample of this bacteria in a fructanric­h solution was exposed to hops extracts, the number of viable organisms was significan­tly reduced.

The researcher­s conclude beta acids from hops have potential to prevent bacterial buildups that trigger laminitis, but they do not recommend that they be given to horses until more research is done. They caution that this was a laboratory study, and the safety and efficacy of giving hops to horses have not yet been tested.

Reference: “Inhibition of fructanfer­menting equine faecal bacteria and Streptococ­cus bovis by hops (Humulus lupulus L.) beta acid,” Journal of Applied Microbiolo­gy, April 2014

 ??  ?? MEDICINAL: Because they contain beta acids that have antibacter­ial properties, hops may help slow the growth of harmful bacterial in the horse’s digestive system.
MEDICINAL: Because they contain beta acids that have antibacter­ial properties, hops may help slow the growth of harmful bacterial in the horse’s digestive system.

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