New research reveals a compelling data point: horses and humans show nearly identical patterns of metabolic dysfunction when exposed to modern processed food environments. This finding challenges the assumption that obesity is primarily driven by individual lifestyle choices and instead implicates environmental factors operating across multiple species simultaneously.
Both species develop insulin resistance, abnormal lipid profiles, and progressive metabolic complications when consuming high-sugar, high-starch processed feeds—the hallmark of contemporary agricultural production. Equine obesity rates have surged in parallel with human obesity trends in recent decades, suggesting a synchronized response to industrial food systems.
This statistical alignment provides robust evidence that environmental modification of food systems may be essential to addressing metabolic disease across populations.
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