Equine Veterinary Clinical Nutrition Diet Analysis by Dr Jennifer Stewart

ECN LOGO 150619 blue sm.jpg
Jenquine A5 booklet - cover-1.png
How to get a diet analysis hexagons.png
ECN booklet pages.png
ECN LOGO 150619 blue sm.jpg
Jenquine A5 booklet - cover-1.png
How to get a diet analysis hexagons.png
ECN booklet pages.png

Equine Veterinary Clinical Nutrition Diet Analysis by Dr Jennifer Stewart

A$250.00

The Importance of Equine Veterinary Clinical Nutrition with Dr Jennifer Stewart BVSc BSc PhD Dip BEP - Equine Veterinarian & Consultant Nutritionist - the only practising Equine Veterinarian & Clinical Nutritionist in Australia)

We are aware that nutrition in horses plays a part in health, welfare, behaviour & recovery from clinical conditions. That’s why it’s important to understand the importance of getting your horse’s nutrition right.

Veterinary Clinical nutrition goes beyond mathematical calculations, minimum recommended intakes & diet analysis.

At Jenquine, we have progressed the standard, spreadsheet-based diet analysis to develop scientifically sound applied equine veterinary clinical nutrition.

More information can be found in our Equine Clinical Nutrition booklet - that features all the science and references behind our products: https://issuu.com/home/published/jenquine_a5_booklet_-_ebook/share

Step 1. Click on add to cart
Step 2. Fill in the form details including: Horse details, current feed amounts (using the weights not scoops), pasture access and any special clinical conditions / special considerations etc.
Step 3. Process payment
Step 4. Dr Jen Stewart will complete a full personalised diet analysis for you. You will receive a diet with adjustments to your current diet using the products that you already use, plus you will receive an additional diet including Jenquine products to compare to.
Step 5. You will receive a 1 on 1 30min phone consultation with Dr Jen to discuss your new diet analysis

Add To Cart

There has been extensive research into feeding horses - much is accurate & applicable, but some is not. Generally, it needs to be combined with other information for it to be usable. The traditional diet analysis offered by nutritionists has limitations because much of the advice is based on data provided by feeding experiments in other species to arrive at minimum feeding standards.

No consideration is given for weather, climate, individual requirements & veterinary clinical conditions. The minimum requirement is just that, calculated according to the amount required to prevent clinical signs of deficiencies. Equine clinical nutrition goes beyond minimum recommended intakes & standard feeding guides - taking into account recent veterinary & scientific studies, effects of growth, clinical conditions, performance problems etc, as well as the current diet.

Horses that suffer from colic, especially if recurrent, should have their history & diet reviewed & analysed. For horses that are overweight, induction of weight loss is necessary to promote a return to insulin-sensitivity & reduce the risk of sub-clinical & clinical laminitis. Alterations to the diet & feeding management begin with a full diet analysis to support veterinary medical management. Diet analysis is the only way to determine total daily nutrient intake, set realistic goals & manage weight loss.

Computer calculations alone don’t reflect the complexity of requirements for a wide range of veterinary clinical conditions. Many nutritional recommendations change as new research expands our knowledge. Estimates of an individual horse’s requirements can be found on feeding guides, but to be clinically applicable & ‘best practice’, nutritional advice requires veterinary knowledge & understanding.

Horses that benefit from in-depth dietary analysis include: pregnant mares & growing horses, those at risk for or affected by veterinary clinical conditions such as arthritis, behavioural issues, body composition concerns, colic, convalescence, Cushings disease (PPID), dental conditions, developmental orthopaedic diseases (DOD), diarrhoea, EGUS, endocrine problems, EPSM, injuries, insulin resistance (IR), lack of muscle & topline, laminitis, orphan foals, poor hoof quality, performance problems, PSSM, post-surgery, tying-up (RER) & skin conditions.

To be clinically applicable & meet ‘best practice’, nutritional advice requires veterinary knowledge, understanding of biochemistry, epigenetics, physiology, pathophysiology & the clinical assessment of health, growth, performance & veterinary conditions.