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Why you need to consider feeding your horse electrolytes this summer [Promotion]


  • Complete science

    Claim your free tub of Complete Electrolytes! Simply order at www.sciencesupplements.co.uk and enter code hh04 during the checkout process.

    Strictly one tub per household, postage and packing of £4.99 applies. This offer is valid only for orders placed via www.sciencesupplements.co.uk and until Friday 18 April 2014 while stocks last.

    Introducing Complete Electrolytes

    Complete Electrolytes is a palatable, fully balanced electrolyte that is gentle on the stomach and replaces electrolytes in proportion to the amounts lost during exercise.

    Sub-optimal electrolyte intake is a frequent cause of poor performance in competition horses. Palatability problems with ordinary electrolytes can limit feed and supplement intake, cause irritation of the stomach and intestine and has also been shown to irritate or cause gastric ulceration in horses. Containing the 5 key electrolytes — sodium, chloride, potassium, calcium and magnesium — with MicroBeadTM Technology means the product dissolves in the small intestine where electrolyte uptake is optimal. It is both palatable and gentle on the stomach unlike ordinary electrolytes.

    Find out more at www.sciencesupplements.co.uk

    Why use electrolytes?

    The 5 major electrolytes are sodium, chloride, potassium, calcium and magnesium.

    These are key nutrients required for nerve and muscle function, maintenance of normal hydration and normal function of the digestive system, kidneys, lungs and heart.

    Sub-optimal electrolyte intake can lead to muscle problems and poor performance, therefore horses in work require extra electrolytes to replace those lost in sweat, faeces and urine.

    The harder the horse works, the hotter the horse gets. The longer a horse works and the warmer the weather, the more sweat and therefore the more electrolytes a horse will lose. 1 litre of horse sweat contains around 3.5g of sodium, 6g of chloride, 1.2g of potassium and 0.1g of calcium. A horse can easily lose 5 litres of sweat each hour on a normal day at a moderate pace — this equates to the loss of around 50g of electrolytes. This amount would not be replaced by the horse’s normal daily hay and hard feed alone.

    When to feed electrolytes

    Electrolyte table

    The simple answer is to feed every day.

    It is common for many horses to only be fed supplemental electrolytes immediately before and during competition.

    If you feed enough electrolytes during training you will not need to increase the amount in the feed when it comes to a competition.

    If you don’t feed in training and feed only in competition you are asking for trouble. It can take weeks or months, not days, to fully restore the body’s normal electrolyte levels following a month or so of training.

    Electrolytes explained

    How electrolytes work

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