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Glycaemic and insulinaemic responses of adult healthy warm‐blooded mares following feeding with Jerusalem artichoke meal
Author(s) -
Glatter M.,
Bochnia M.,
Goetz F.,
Gottschalk J.,
Koeller G.,
Mielenz N.,
Hillegeist D.,
Greef J. M.,
Einspanier A.,
Zeyner A.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of animal physiology and animal nutrition
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.651
H-Index - 56
eISSN - 1439-0396
pISSN - 0931-2439
DOI - 10.1111/jpn.12669
Subject(s) - meal , food science , zoology , biology
Summary This study aimed to investigate the impact of the supplementation of a pre‐biotic compound [Jerusalem artichoke meal ( JAM )] on the glycaemic and insulinaemic response in healthy, non‐obese warm‐blooded horses. Six adult mares [mean body weight (bwt) 529 ± 38.7 kg; body condition score 5.1 ± 0.49/9] were used. In two equal meals per day, the horses received crushed oat grains (1 g starch/kg bwt per day) and meadow hay (2 kg/100 kg bwt per day) which together were likely to meet the energy recommendation for light work (GfE, [, 2014]). Additionally, they received either 0.15 g fructo‐oligosaccharides and inulin ( FOS + INU )/kg bwt per day via commercial JAM or maize cob meal without grains as control ( CON ) in 2 × 3‐week periods according to a crossover design. Blood was collected on d21 of the feeding period at different ante‐ and postprandial ( PP ) time points (−60, 0, 30, 60, 90, 120, 180, 240 and 300 min), and the plasma glucose and serum insulin levels were determined. Feeding JAM vs. CON did not change the PP peak of glucose or insulin (glucose: 6.3 ± 0.40 vs. 7.0 ± 0.87 mmol/l; insulin: 0.508 ± 0.087 vs. 0.476 ± 0.082 nmol/l) nor did it cause different AUC s until 120 and 300 min PP for glucose and insulin, respectively ( AUC 120 , glucose: 997 ± 41.6 vs. 1015 ± 41.63 mmol/l per minute, insulin: 49 ± 6.3 vs. 42 ± 6.3 nmol/l per minute; AUC 300 , glucose: 1943 ± 142.3 vs. 2115 ± 142.3 mmol/l per minute, insulin: 94 ± 14.8 vs. 106 ± 14.8 nmol/l per minute; p > 0.05). Following JAM vs. CON feeding, glucose and insulin levels declined more rapidly until 240 min PP and tended to be lower (p = 0.053 and p = 0.056, respectively) at this time point. This result might be promising and should further be studied more detailed.

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