An article and case study from Holistic Horsekeeping.

Trish

2. A Papaya a Day Keeps the Ulcers Away
===============================================
Since digestive health plays such an important role in our 
horses' health and happiness, and since we've focused so much on 
ulcers recently, this month I'm offering a highly educational 
article by Gillian Clissold on beneficial properties of papaya on 
digestion. Enjoy!

<><> The Role of Papaya <><>
Papaya aids digestion in part by increasing mucous secretion in 
the mouth, esophagus and stomach. In some cases, a horse that had 
been turning its nose up at food starts eating within moments of 
the administration of papaya. There seems to be what could be 
called a "reverse Pavlovian response". The horse's mouth waters, 
so it feels the urge to eat.

Even more importantly, papaya initiates a thickening of the 
horse's natural stomach lining which  provides protection against 
excess acid. It both gives damaged tissues a chance to heal, and 
helps prevent new ulcers. In horses moving vigorously (race 
horses, eventers, endurance horses) the esophageal mucous 
protection can help keep reflux from damaging the esophagus.  In 
an ulcer study published in the March 2005 issue of The Horse 
Journal, "rapid relief within three to five days" was reported. 
The same study reported that the other major natural products for 
digestive problems, herbal blends, worked considerably more 
slowly.

In one case a weanling with severe ulcers and a bloated stomach 
did not respond to expensive pharmaceuticals but did recover to 
papaya. A race horse that had such severe ulcers it could not 
race, even after many weeks on an acid reducing pharmaceutical, 
had a clear endoscopic exam after three weeks on papaya, and then 
won a stakes race.

Unlike most of the conventional anti-ulcer treatments, papaya is 
safe for long-term use. The calcium/magnesium antacid type 
products work by neutralizing acid and coating the stomach wall 
with a chalky protective layer. However, if they are used over an 
extended period, resulting high levels of magnesium can interfere 
with the absorption of calcium.  Low calcium levels can cause 
nervousness, bone changes, weak and aching muscles and abnormal 
heart rhythms. The expensive pharmaceuticals which reduce acid 
production are great for most acute ulcer symptoms. However, acid 
is needed to control and modify bacteria in the gut. If the acid 
levels are low for many months, "bad" bacteria, particularly 
Salmonella, can overpopulate the digestive tract and create 
conditions for colic. Furthermore, prolonged low acid levels can 
cause poor absorption of vitamin B12, inefficient utilization of 
dietary protein, food allergies, bloating and foul manure. 

Papaya is also useful in conjunction with administration of 
certain medicines. Many barn managers "prep" the horse with a 
half dose of papaya to trigger extra mucous in the digestive 
tract lining just before they administer an anti-inflammatory 
capable of damaging the stomach lining. They then administer the 
anti-inflammatory, and follow up with another half dose of papaya 
to wash away the foul taste of the medicine.

Similarly, endurance riders and eventers who give electrolytes to 
their mounts mix the powder with papaya before administering. The 
extra mucous triggered by the papaya protects the mouth, 
esophagus and stomach from the caustic burn of frequent 
electrolyte administrations.

The mucous producing characteristic of papaya is complemented by 
the enzyme it contains, papain. Papain is the main active 
ingredient in meat tenderizer.  It closely resembles the 
digestive enzyme pepsin. Old horses benefit from papaya because 
its enzyme breaks down what their less efficient digestive tract 
can't and they gain weight. Papaya also helps foals who get 
"scours" when the hormones in their mother's milk changes during 
the first heat presents the foal's digestive tract with a new 
challenge, for which it does not have the appropriate microbe 
population. The papain enzyme picks up where the foal's own 
system is insufficient. 

Weaning is a stressful time, too.  Not only are foals anxious 
(creating conditions for an ulcer), but they must deal with a 
change in diet, for which they may not have the correct balance 
of gut "bugs". In addition to the papaya induced 
ulcer-preventative mucous secretion, the papain helps weanlings 
digest new diets while their gut microbes are adjusting. 

Cribbing often decreases when horses have papaya daily. Cribbing 
incidence at weaning is drastically reduced, and about half of 
adult cribbers also reduce or cease the habit. While most 
positive effects of papaya are evident in a week, in the case of 
a confirmed cribber, it can take up to a month for improvement. 
(Cribbing associated with stomach pain or missing nutrients is 
most responsive to papaya.)

Similarly, when antibiotics kill good gut bacteria, leaving the 
digestive tract unable to sufficiently break down food, diarrhea 
results. Papaya picks up where the bacteria leave off, and 
antibiotic-induced diarrhea can improve.

When horses get diarrhea during trailering, it can in part be due 
to anxiety-induced changes in gut motility not allowing 
absorption. The papain enzyme helps break down the food in the 
limited time it is in the gut and may reduce the diarrhea.

A final important characteristic of papaya is its taste and 
consistency. It has the viscosity of tomato ketchup, and is 
extremely sweet. This makes it ideal for camouflaging unpleasant 
medicines.  One racehorse trainer wasted several hundred dollars 
of expensive antibiotics, which his horse spit out on the walls, 
before he realized that the horse would happily swallow the dose 
if it were mixed with papaya. Horses who need extra salt in hot 
weather, but refuse it in their food, lap it up if it's mixed in 
papaya.

Papaya apparently tasted so good to one horse that he grabbed a 
bottle left close to his stall, chewed off the cap and licked up 
the resulting spill. Another owner found that if he approached 
the fence with a dosing syringe full of the fruit, his horse 
would immediately gallop over. 

Papaya is also a mild "blood thinner". The increased circulation 
associated with the slight anticoagulant effect may account for 
the very shiny coats and high incidence of dapples that many 
horses on papaya enjoy. Some caretakers also report an 
improvement in joint health as well.  Papaya should not be 
administered to a horse that is on an anticoagulant already, as 
there may be an additive affect.  Some stages of pregnancy can be 
complicated by bleeding, so it is unwise to administer papaya to 
a mare who is pregnant or who is about to be bred. 

Finally, some papaya-fed horses become quieter and accept 
training more readily.  Papaya contains no tranquilizer, so it 
must be that a horse with a more comfortable digestive tract is 
happier.




<><> The Case of "Sportcar" <><>
In 1999 I purchased a 9 year old 15 hand 2 inch low level 
eventing mare of indeterminate breeding as a resale project. She 
had been rescued from a slaughter truck as a yearling, and 
despite good training and a caring owner, she had become so 
spooky and unpredictable she was no longer a good match for her 
rider. When she arrived at my barn, she was underweight, had a 
surly attitude, poor appetite, and dumped me at least once a week 
with massive spooks. She was reluctant to "go round" and while 
she had a spectacular jump, she rushed quite badly.

She had done Novice level eventing and I hoped to bring her up to 
Preliminary and re-sell her. While training and resolution of 
hitherto undiagnosed Lyme disease improved her health and 
behavior considerably, it was only when we recognized and 
addressed her ulcers that she truly came into her own. 

She was already being managed in a holistic manner, and she was 
competing infrequently, so we obviously had to add an ulcer 
remedy. My holistic veterinarian suggested I use fresh papaya, 
which immediately increased her appetite and, most noticeably, 
changed the look in her eye. She no longer looked grumpy when 
being tacked up, her appetite increased and I was able to reduce 
her grain meals by ½ and still keep her weight up. Her spookiness 
was much reduced, her rushing became manageable, and while her 
dressage was never spectacular, she stopped having heart attacks 
about the judge and the flowers, and concentrated on her job.

Eventually I was unable to find a regular affordable supply of 
fresh papaya. I discovered the Healthmate company via the 
internet and began to buy their purees, concentrated papaya 
product by the case. 

Despite the fact that she is built downhill and looks as if she 
should be herding cows, and that I had never gone higher than 
Preliminary and was in my mid 40s, Sport and I started to move up 
the eventing levels, and I decided to sell a different horse and 
keep her. In 2003, when she was 13 and I was 47, we astonished 
ourselves by moving up to Advanced. We had a spectacularly 
successful year and her ulcers stayed in abeyance despite trailer 
rides of 16 hours and intense galloping to get her fit. She 
crowned her year by being the 2003 US Eventing Association Mare 
of the Year.  In December of that year, just as I was 
contemplating accepting one of the large offers I had received 
for her to pay off the unmanageable debts accumulated from the 
intense competition year, Healthmate decided to sponsor us and 
begin to nationally market their Stomach Soother product. Not 
only was I able to afford to keep her, I was able to quit my "day 
job" as a college professor, and devote myself to my horse 
business full time. We continued at Advanced in 2004, won the 
"Over the Walls" event and placed well at the Fair Hill CCI***. I 
retired her from eventing in 2005 at the age of 15, and she now 
has a successful show jumping career in the 4 foot divisions. 
Last month at age 17 she won a "Mini Prix" against horses half 
her age and many times her price.

She now has two daughters by "Aberjack", named "Dirtbike" and 
"Motocross". They were foaled in 2004 out of surrogate mares 
following embryo transfer. They both went on "Stomach Soother" 
for nine days when they got "foal scours". I put them back on a 
month before they were weaned, and they have remained on it ever 
since. They both have their mother's high strung, easily worried 
temperaments, but we have not had one episode of digestive 
distress, even though at 3 ½ they are now in training and 
trailering a few times a month.

*********************
Gillian Clissold is an Advanced Level Eventer sponsored by 
Healthmate Products. Contact them at www.stomachsoother.com, or 
800-584-8642. You can also order Stomach Soother from Holistic 
Horsekeeping at:


http://www.holistichorsekeeping.com/ashop/catalogue.php?exp=32|&cat=37



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