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Effect of paddock vs. stall housing on 24 hour gastric pH within the proximal and ventral equine stomach
Author(s) -
HUSTED L.,
SANCHEZ L. C.,
OLSEN S. N.,
BAPTISTE K. E.,
MERRITT A. M.
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
equine veterinary journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.82
H-Index - 87
eISSN - 2042-3306
pISSN - 0425-1644
DOI - 10.2746/042516408x284673
Subject(s) - stomach , cannula , zoology , hay , horse , medicine , stall (fluid mechanics) , gastroenterology , anatomy , biology , surgery , paleontology , physics , mechanics
Summary Reasons for performing study : Stall housing has been suggested as a risk factor for ulcer development in the equine stomach; however, the exact pathogenesis for this has not been established. Objectives : To investigate the effect of 3 environmental situations (grass paddock, stall alone or stall with adjacent companion) on pH in the proximal and the ventral stomach. Methods : Six horses with permanently implanted gastric cannulae were used in a randomised, cross‐over, block design. Each horse rotated through each of three 24 h environmental situations. Horses remained on their normal diet (grass hay ad libitum and grain b.i.d.) throughout the study. Intragastric pH was measured continuously for 72 h just inside the lower oesophageal sphincter (proximal stomach) and via a pH probe in the gastric cannula (ventral stomach). Results : Neither proximal nor ventral 24 h gastric pH changed significantly between the 3 environmental situations. Mean hourly proximal gastric pH decreased significantly in the interval from 01.00–09.00 h compared to the interval from 13.00–20.00 h, regardless of environmental situation. Median hourly proximal pH only differed in the interval from 06.00–07.00 h compared to the interval 14.00–19.00 h. Neither mean nor median hourly ventral gastric pH varied significantly with the time of day. Conclusions : The change in housing status used in the current study did not affect acid exposure within either region of the equine stomach. The pH in the ventral stomach was uniformly stable throughout the study, while the proximal pH demonstrated a 24 h circadian pattern. Potential relevance : Since stall housing was not associated with prolonged acid exposure to the proximal stomach, this aspect alone does not explain the increased risk of squamous ulcer development. The circadian rhythm associated with proximal intragastric pH warrants further investigation.

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