Farms.com Home   News

What Is the Best Type of Selenium Supplement for Horses?

This study was conducted to evaluate how exercised Thoroughbreds digest and retain selenium from either sodium selenite or selenium-enriched yeast-supplemented diets.

The apparent absorption of selenite and selenium-yeast averaged 51.1% and 57.3%, respectively. Most of the difference in selenium retention was the result of increased selenium absorption since there was no difference in average daily urinary selenium excretion between the two supplemental sources. Following exercise, selenium excretion in the selenite group was significantly higher than during nonexercise days of the collection period. A similar increase did not occur in the selenium-yeast group. Urinary selenium excretion was lower in the selenium-yeast group compared to the selenite-fed horses on the day of exercise.

Both plasma and whole blood selenium increased post-exercise. Red blood cell selenium was similar between both treatment groups, and there was a trend towards a decrease in red blood cell selenium post-exercise. Plasma selenium remained elevated in both treatments 4 hours post-exercise. By 24 hours post-exercise, selenium of the selenite group had returned to pre-exercise levels, while plasma selenium from the selenium-yeast-supplemented group remained elevated. At this time, selenium-yeast plasma selenium was higher than the selenite group.

Increased urinary selenium excretion following exercise in the selenite group suggests that the requirement for selenium by exercised horses may be dependent on selenium source and exercise frequency.

Source: Equinews

Click here to see more...

Trending Video

How BinSentry Is Revolutionizing Feed Management | WPX 2025 with Darren Howie

Video: How BinSentry Is Revolutionizing Feed Management | WPX 2025 with Darren Howie

At the 2025 World Pork Expo, Rachel Fishback interviews Darren Howie from BinSentry to uncover the latest in feed management innovation. Discover how BinSentry is replacing manual bin checks with real-time monitoring, why slide-related inefficiencies cause significantly more feed outages than empty bins, and how their Critical Event Management text alert system keeps producers proactive and ahead of issues. Essential insights for improving feed efficiency and minimizing disruptions.