A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis on Sodium Bicarbonate Administration and Equine Running Performance: Is it Time to Stop Horsing Around With Baking Soda?

Published
December 06, 2020
Journal
Journal of equine veterinary science
PICOID
d95e4677
DOI
Citations
2
Keywords
Exercise performance, Horse, Milkshake, NaHCO(3), Racing
Copyright
Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Patients/Population/Participants

Standardbred and Thoroughbred horses

Intervention

acute sodium bicarbonate administration

Comparison

control group

Outcome

running performance

Abstract

P
I
C
O

Sodium bicarbonate administration in the hours prior to exercise has been used as a performance-enhancing substance in horses since the late 1980s. Although sodium bicarbonate administration to racehorses 24 hours before racing is a banned practice in most racing industries, whether or not it improves running performance in racehorses is currently unclear. The aim of this systematic review and meta-analysis was to establish whether or not acute sodium bicarbonate administration improves running performance in trained Standardbred and Thoroughbred horses. Seven randomized controlled trials, including eight experimental (exercise) trials and 74 horses, were included after a comprehensive search for relevant studies that met the inclusion criteria. Results indicated that sodium bicarbonate administration at 2.5-5 hours prior to a standardized treadmill test to exhaustion or simulated race (time-trial) does not influence running performance (number of horses, the overall effect [95% CI]: 32, -0.13 [-0.64 to 0.37] and 42, 0.01 [-0.42 to 0.44], respectively, both P > .05). The included studies demonstrated minimal heterogeneity (I

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