Medycyna Wet. 65 (6), 394-398, 2009
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Ogoński T., Cieśla A.
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Total antioxidants and antioxidant system microelements in the blood plasma
of recreation saddle-horses after a ten-week long working season
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The aim of the study was to demonstrate that monotonous everyday work lasting for several hours a day
and many weeks long in a commercial horse-riding centre may lead to chronic fatigue and consequently to
increased susceptibility to oxidative stress in recreation horses used there. During the experiment, from the
mid-June to the beginning of September, 16 half-bred horses eleven geldings and five mares at the age of
4-8 years, were kept under uniform environmental conditions in a seasonal horse-riding seaside centre in
Poland and used on the average four hours a day for six days each week. Before and after the season, their
blood samples were collected, in which haematological indices, Mg, Fe, Cu, Zn and Mg concentrations,
and total plasma reducing potential by the FRAP method were determined. The results showed a significant
deterioration of peripheral blood morphology at rest and a decrease in plasma reducing potential. The
product RBC × HGB × 1012 kg × dm6 decreased from 1.66 ± 0.71 to 0.99 ± 0.16 (Pu < 0.005). FRAP decreased
from 5.14 ± 0.88 to 4.16 ± 0.67 × 104 mol/dm3 (Pp < 0.001), while Cu concentration increased to the upper
normal range, i.e. to 2.18 ± 0.65 × 105 mol/dm3 (Pp < 0.06). At the same time, Mg, Fe, Zn and Mn concentrations
did not change significantly. The decrease of RBC and HGB values was acknowledged by us as a clinical
symptom of chronic fatigue which, apart from general lesions such as weight loss, unwillingness to work and
growing irritability, was accompanied by thrombocytopenia, hypoalbuminemia, dehydration, disturbance in
microelement homeostasis and a drop in total plasma antioxidant potential. Consequently it is concluded that
in some cases, at the end of working season, recreation horses should not be forced to an intensive effort, e.g.
a race or jumps, because during intensive aerobic work both the oxygen transport system and antioxidant
defence system undergo an overload, which is followed by the growing probability of damage to tissues by ROS.
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Keywords: recreation horse, chronic fatigue, FRAP, trace elements
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