BTB: What's up with my supp? Part III (Overwhelmed) |
What's up with my supp? Part III (Overwhelmed) Posted: 10 Jun 2010 01:15 PM PDT Thanks for hanging in there through parts I and II. At Rolex this year I bought a joint supplement for Riley -- but it totally underwhelmed. A little research into the product revealed that Texas A&M did a study on that supplement that yielded lukewarm results. While they had a ton of press releases about this study before it actually occurred, the product name was nowhere to be found on the published report and there were no press releases about the unimpressive results. Shocker. So... I started looking for new a new joint supplement. I decided to consider only those ingredients that have actual double blind clinical studies supporting their effectiveness. Guess what, that whittles down the choices quite a bit. Now ask me what supplements I ended up selecting? Well, not the ones below, although the ingredients are similar. I've come to have some distinct preferences in supplements -- no powder, no liquid, for example. I'm trying Flex-Max from Absorbine and SmartSenior for Harv, along with a collagen supplement I've blogged about. My vet told me that horses' response to a joint supplement is highly individual -- what works for one may not work for another, and I don't think science has unravelled the mystery. Till then, we experiment till we find the elixir of equine soft tissue support! MSM
CORTA-FLX
COSEQUIN
Sashas EQ
CONQUER Liquid/gel
GLC 5500
PROBLEMS WITH QUALITY OF RESEARCH
PROBLEMS WITH QUALITY OF JOINT SUPPS Quality counts with joint supplements. Veterinary Practice News by Lynn Tiffany. "Only GLC 5500 and Cosequin Optimized have received Consumer Labs approval in the equine category to meet both label claim and test free of lead contaminates." |
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