Joint Stresses in the
Performance Horse By Pam Harrison BSc (Hons) Physiology,
Consultant to TRM, manufacturer of the Stride
range of Natural Mobility Supplements for
Performance Horses.
In all working horses, the skeletal structure
is constantly absorbing shock and cartilage
within the joints, which functions as a
‘shock absorber’, is particularly subject
to significant, repetitive stresses. With
increasing workload, so the frequency and
often intensity of the stress increases.
As a result, the horse’s
ability to maintain healthy cartilage in
all its joints is absolutely fundamental
to soundness, which for trainers and competitors
necessitates an understanding of the factors
pre-disposing the horse to injury, along
with management regimes aimed at maintaining
cartilage and hence joint health.
Ground conditions, nutritional
status, fitness and fatigue all play a role
and being aware of joint health is now an
important aspect of training and competing
horses successfully, especially at the higher
levels of modern equestrian sport. Other
factors include trauma, age, the locomotory
demands of the difference disciplines and
a genetic predisposition to disease.
Cartilage in the joints,
correctly described as articular cartilage,
is resilient within the horse’s normal physiological
limitations, but an overload of work can
begin the process of cartilage breakdown.
An overload of just 5% is sufficient to
initiate what is commonly known as Degenerative
Joint Disease (DJD).
DJD is a common problem
in competition horses, most frequently affecting
the hocks, knees, front fetlocks and front
navicular bones and can end careers. The
health of articular cartilage depends on
a delicate balance between the formation
and the degradation of its components.
Articular cartilage can be thought of as
‘the last defence’ for a horse’s joints
and comprises four layers of cells, covering
the ends of bones forming joints and bathed
by synovial fluid (joint fluid) contained
within the joint capsule. Damage is quantified
by how many layers of cartilage are affected
by erosion and how large an area is affected.
Seriously damaged areas, if replaced by
bony tissue from the base of the cartilage
layer, will result in the joint losing its
compressibility, manifesting as reducing
joint function in a progressively lame horse.
The stage and development of disease will
affect the efficacy of treatments and the
outcome, but if there is early diagnosis,
it is now known that the body can regenerate
cartilage tissue, dependent on the availability
of essential nutrients.
To help prevent damage
happening in the first place, the same nutrients
necessary for joint repair must be available
in the amounts required, or the cartilage
will lose its ability to replenish and repair
itself. As cartilage has no direct blood
supply, it must receive nutrition via the
synovial fluid, hence the importance of
also maintaining the integrity of the synovial
fluid. A good joint supplement will provide
all of the required nutrients, helping to
reduce inflammation, improving the synovial
fluid and the cartilage.
The three most discussed
nutrients required to replenish the cartilage
matrix occur naturally in the body, hence
can be called nutraceuticals and supplementation
has been shown as beneficial in the maintenance
of healthy cartilage.
These three nutraceuticals
are glucosamine, chondroitin sulphate and
methylsulfonylmethane (MSM) and together
can support the healing process in the cartilage
matrix. Some researchers have indicated
they may also have a prophylactic effect
on joints.
It is beyond the scope
of this article to discuss the detailed
physiology of these processes, but in somewhat
simplistic terms, glucosamine and chondroitin
sulphate act synergistically to stimulate
the synthesis of new cartilage, whilst simultaneously
inhibiting the activity of degradative cartilage
enzymes. This helps to normalise the cartilage
matrix, in essence treating DJD at the cellular
level.
MSM is a source of bio-available
sulphur, which is known to play a critical
role in the synthesis of connective tissue
(including cartilage) so when there is a
joint problem, the amount of sulphur available
should be increased in order to support
tissue repair.
In addition MSM is useful
within a management programme to help ease
pain and increase mobility in the joint,
at the same time facilitating sustained
cell ‘flow-through’, allowing harmful substances
to flow out and at the same time permitting
nutrients to flow in. This can speed up
the timescale for delivery of nutritional
support to a compromised joint.
Synovial fluid not only acts as the ‘carrier’
pathway for the exchange of nutrients and
waste products between the general circulation
and the specialist cells responsible for
cartilage regeneration, it also provides
lubrication for the joint, a function provided
by the hyaluronate fraction of the fluid.
As a result, again somewhat
simplistically, it follows that hyaluronate
(commonly known as hyaluronic acid or HA)
is essential for the correct function of
the synovial fluid and hence the joint,
with changes in its composition now regarded
as sensitive indicators of the degree of
inflammation caused by a joint injury. It
has been shown by researchers that increasing
levels of HA in damaged joints can be beneficial
by improving the quality of the synovial
fluid, leading to improved joint function,
so supplementing with HA is also recognised
as offering potentially significant benefits.
The first clinical trials
investigating the effectiveness of glucosamine
took place in 1969 and since then, the scientific
evidence supporting the value of high quality
joint supplements has increased irrefutably.
What is equally evident from reading some
of the landmark research is that the formulation
of a product and the levels of inclusion
of its key ‘actives’ – glucosamine, chondroitin,
MSM and hylauronic acid (HA) - will impact
on the extent to which it can positively
influence the health and integrity of stressed
or diseased equine joints. Everyone with
responsibility for performance horses will
encounter joint problems at some point and
understanding the importance of correct
nutrition to long term soundness makes sound
common sense.
This article has been kindly provided
TRM Ireland, manufacturers of Stride,
Stride HA and Stride MP. For further information
or advice, please visit their website www.trm-ireland.com,
email info@trm-ireland.com,
telephone +353-45-434258 or write to TRM
Ltd. Industrial Estate. Newbridge. Co. Kildare.
Ireland.