Purina® WellSolve L/S® Horse Feed

Categories: , , Tags: , , , ,

Description

The low starch and sugar diet for horses with special needs. Your veterinarian may recommend that you feed a low starch and sugar diet to your horse. Our goal in creating WellSolve L/S Horse Feed was to thoroughly research the area of equine carbohydrate metabolism and provide the best possible diet we could offer for horses with special needs. WellSolve L/S Horse Feed is the result of years of research and development, including controlled studies at the Purina Animal Nutrition Center and extensive field testing. We researched many aspects, including the amounts and types of fiber, the ideal feed form, the unique vitamin and mineral requirements of horses on low starch and sugar diets, as well as energy requirements. We adjusted protein-to-energy ratios and added high quality essential amino acids as well as antioxidants and essential fatty acids. It’s an enormous balancing act that requires the consideration of more than just the sugar and starch levels. However, the result is worth it – a nutritionally balanced, highly palatable diet that veterninarians and horse owners can use with confidence.

Features & Benefits

Added Antioxidants

Help address the negative effects of free radicals and support a strong immune system

Backed by Six Years of Research

Involving 8,768 individual tests and 7,576 feeding trials

Blend of Vegetable Oils

Provide essential fatty acids for shine & bloom

Concentrate Feed

Designed to be fed with hay or pasture

Highly Digestible Fibers

Provide fermentable fiber to the hindgut as a slow-release energy source with very little to no insulin response

Low Starch & Sugar

With no molasses or grain – guaranteed maximum of 11%

Proprietary Blend of Amino Acids

Help maintain muscle tone

Veterinarian Researched

With data published in the Journal of Equine Veterinary Science

Vitamin & Mineral Fortification

Provides 100% of the required vitamins and minerals when fed as directed

Based on “Nutrient Requirements of Horses Sixth Revised Edition–2007” published by the National Research Council