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Glossary
sacrum
saddle
saddle flap
saddle joint
saddle panel
sagittal midline
sagittal plane
sarcoid
scalping
scapula
schooling whip
scintigraphy
sclerosis
screw-stud
searing
seated-out shoe, french style
seating
sedation
seedy toe
selenium
semifinished product
senses
sensibility
sensitivity
sensory receptor
sepsis
septic
serum
service life
sesamoid bone
set hammer
set-back (horseshoe)
setting down
shaping (horseshoe)
shearing force
shock absorption
shock wave therapy
shoe puller
shoeing
shoeing 'à l'anglaise'
shoeing 'à la française'
shoeing area
shoeing interval
shoeing tools
Shore hardness
shoulder
shoulder joint
sickle-hocked
side saddle
sidebone
silicium
silicone
skeleton
ski-joering
skirt
skull
sliding horseshoe
slippered shoe
smegma
snaffle bit
snow insert
social facilitation
soft palate
solar
solar arch
solar dermis
solar surface, distal phalanx
solar surface, hoof
sole
sole horn
sole retention
somatic nervous system
sound (horse)
spasm
spavin
spavin horseshoe
specificity
spinal cord
splaying
splint bone
sprain
spreading, horseshoe
square-head nail
squealing
stainless steel
stall jack
stallion
stamp
stamping
stance
stance deviation
stance phase
standard military horseshoe
starch
steel
stem cell
sterile
steroid
stifle
stifle joint
stirrup bars
Stockholm tar
stocks
Strahlfreiheit
straight-bar shoe
strain
strangles
stratum lamellatum
stratum medium
stud
stud drift
stud hole
stud key
stud punch
subchondral
subchondral bone plate
subcutis
subfebrile
sugar
superficial
superficial digital flexor tendon (abbr. SDFT)
supplements (nutrition)
support shoe, lateral or medial
supporting limb lameness
surcingle
surgery
suspensory apparatus
suspensory apparatus of the hoof
suspensory ligament
sweat flap
sweat rug
swing phase
swinging limb lameness
symmetrical
synovial bursa
synovial fluid
synovitis
synsarcosis
synthetics
systemic
sugar
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sugar

Soluble, sweet, short-chained carbohydrates (molecules consisting of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen) like glucose, lactose, fructose, or galactose. Some consist of one unit (simple sugars or monosaccharides), others consist of two units (double sugars or disaccharides). Sugars can be freely available in food (e.g. fructose in fruit) or be joined by chemical bonds to form larger carbohydrates (like starch).
Glucose is a simple sugar unit that serves as the basic ""fuel"" for our energy metabolism. It can be ingested in the form of sucrose (a double sugar consisting of a unit of fructose and glucose) or as a part of larger carbohydrate molecules such as starch. These molecules are broken down by specific enzymes and the units of glucose are absorbed and transported around the body to where they are needed to supply energy.

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