“…The term equine gastric ulcer syndrome (EGUS) has been in use since 1999 to describe stomach ulcers in horses, but more recently it has become clear that it encompasses two very different disease entities, now termed equine squamous gastric disease (ESGD) and equine glandular gastric disease (EGGD), with differing risk factors, epidemiology, clinical signs and prognosis (Sykes et al., 2015). Equine squamous gastric disease is the result of increased exposure of the squamous mucosa to acid and may be primary or secondary to duodenal outflow obstruction (Bezdekova & Hanak, 2009; Bezdekova et al., 2020; Sprayberry, 2015; Sykes et al., 2015; Zedler et al., 2009). Stress is often thought to play a role in the development of both ESGD and EGGD, both in foals and adult horses, although proof of the role of stress in ESGD is scarce and often indirect (Scheidegger et al., 2017; Sprayberry, 2015).…”