
As you longe your horse, watch for stiffness or lameness. Veterinary evaluation will help you determine whats causing the problem and if an oral hyaluronic acid product might help.
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There has been such an explosion in oral supplements for joint
support with various new ingredients that it’s hard to keep up with them all.
One ingredient that shows up in more products all the time is hyaluronic acid
(also called HA).
Hyaluronic acid is a member of a group of compounds called
glycosaminoglycans. These substances are what give skin its elasticity,
cartilage its "give," and fluids their lubricating properties. Hyaluronic acid
is found both in joint fluid and the cartilage itself. It is a major factor
contributing to the slippery feel of joint fluid. In inflamed joints, breakdown
of HA makes the joint fluid more watery and less able to keep the joint
"greased." Inside the cartilage itself, hyaluronic acid combines with another
glycosaminoglycan called aggrecan to form a complex that helps trap fluid in the
cartilage and keeps it flexible and resistant to being overly compressed.
In the joint, hyaluronic acid is produced both by the
chondrocytes, which are specialized cells inside the cartilage, and also by the
synovial membrane. In an inflamed joint, enzymes called the hyaluronidases cause
the breakdown of hyaluronic acid. High activity of these enzymes is associated
with arthritis. Interestingly enough, short chains of hyaluronic acid, produced
in the process of breaking down HA, actually contribute to inflammation in the
joint by triggering other pathways of inflammation. This is why chronic
arthritic problems can become self-perpetuating cycles.
Interest in hyaluronic acid for treating arthritis in horses
dates back to the early 1970s, when "black market" hyaluronic acid from Europe
started showing up on racetracks, first in the Standardbred world, then among
Thoroughbreds. At that time, all hyaluronic acid used was injected directly into
joints. It didn’t take long for the amazing effects of this treatment to become
widely known. Before hyaluronic acid, joint problems were treated primarily with
corticosteroids. This worked for a while, but when done frequently and in high
doses, the steroids themselves started to cause problems by inhibiting the
metabolism of joint cells. Infections of the joint and secondary metabolic
effects also were risks with corticosteroids.
| How Do They Work? |
| How joint supplements work is still a bit of a mystery. The
effects they have on cell cultures in a laboratory may not be what they are
actually doing inside the body. One common effect appears to be to "tie up" the
enzymes that break down joint fluid and cartilage. If the supplement can get the
attention of these destructive enzymes and occupy them, the balance inside the
joint has a chance to get on top of the inflammation. Hyaluronic acid may also
have important "cell signaling" effects, meaning it could help stimulate the
production of other glycosaminoglycans |
It wasn’t long before American companies jumped on board the HA
bandwagon and FDA-approved hyaluronic acid products became available. The
high-molecular-weight products worked better than the less expensive,
low-molecular-weight ones that had shorter chain lengths and were more likely to
make joints painfully swell for a few days afterward. In those days, it was
thought that this was because they weren’t as purified as the more expensive
products. We now know it was probably because low-molecular-weight hyaluronic
acid actually causes an inflammatory response in the joint.
The 1980s and most of the 1990s represented the heyday of
hyaluronic acid joint injections. The next big development was when the product
Legend came on the scene in 1991. Legend is an intravenous hyaluronic acid that
is carried by the blood stream to the joints. While some were skeptical, the
experiments done to satisfy the FDA’s requirements showed very clearly that it
did indeed work. In those studies, joint inflammation was experimentally
induced, and the equine test subjects were split into two groups—one treated
with intravenous hyaluronic acid and the other was an untreated control group.
The treated horses did significantly better in terms of pain, freedom of
movement, and even the actual condition of their cartilage. You can read the
details of those studies online at http://www.fda.gov/FOI/1392.htm.

From the saddle, you can feel if your horse is off. Early veterinary intervention and
treatment with oral HA products may be just whats needed.
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The advantage to the intravenous product was that it completely
removed the low, but real, risk of causing a joint infection or accidentally
damaging the joint cartilage with a needle. In fact, it worked so well that
nowadays IV injection is used more often than direct joint injections.
Effective, yes—but also expensive! Intravenous hyaluronic acid
is a prescription drug, so it also requires a veterinarian fee. Moving forward
to the 21st century, the first oral hyaluronic acid treatment for horses was
released: hyaluronic acid in a gel form. This sounded like a great idea—but
would it work? Could it even be absorbed?
At the time this product was introduced, there were no good
studies to show absorption. However, orally given hyaluronic acid was being used
experimentally as a carrier for insulin absorption. Proof of absorption finally
emerged at the 2008 meeting of the Federation of American Societies of
Experimental Biology. Radioactively labeled high-molecular-weight HA was fed to
mice and dogs. By measuring radioactivity in the blood and body tissues, it was
found that even this large, high-molecular-weight molecule could be absorbed
(with about 13% of the dose making its way into the body).
Getting back to horses and oral hyaluronic acid: A study
published in 2006 performed at the Rood and Riddle Equine Hospital in Kentucky
looked at the effects of using hyaluronic acid gel postoperatively in yearlings
who had surgery for osteochondrosis problems in the hock. The study included 48
yearlings, with half receiving the HA gel while the other half did not. They
found significantly reduced joint swelling in the treated horses.
The dosage used for the Rood and Riddle study was 100 mg. A
study presented at the 2003 meeting of the Matrix Biology Institute (a nonprofit
organization devoted entirely to hyaluronic acid research) reported that the
same 100 mg dose given to racing thoroughbreds reduced the number of times vets
were asked to examine them for lameness.

Hot, swollen joints benefit directly from
hyaluronic acid usage. It works well to treat pain and inflammation and increases
freedom of movement.
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My personal experience with hyaluronic acid is that it is
extremely effective orally for getting rapid control of joints that are acutely
inflamed, hot, and painful. Improvements are obvious within 24 to 72 hours. The
gel and liquid forms seem to work more quickly. Hyaluronic acid is also now
widely available as a powder. This form has not been studied to see how it
compares for absorption or effectiveness.
Is HA For Your Horse?
If you’re already using a joint supplement, should you switch
to one containing hyaluronic acid? This ingredient definitely benefits horses
with joints that are hot and swollen from a flare up of an old problem, an
entirely new problem, or from being worked hard and regularly. If your horse has
more of an old arthritis with a largely stable pattern of stiffness and no
dramatic changes, it’s a little more difficult to predict if HA will help. The
best advice we can give you is that if your current joint supplement isn’t
giving you the results you had hoped for, try adding hyaluronic acid. You could
try buying an HA-only product first and adding this to your current supplement,
or you could switch to a combination product that contains hyaluronic acid and
doses of other ingredients that are similar to your current supplement. The
object here is to avoid making any changes except for the addition of the
HA.