SynOsteon
Healthy Bone Supplement
This all-natural supplement helps your horse with :
Bone Development
Healthy Bone Maintenance
Promotes Bone Remodeling
Shin development
Developed by an equine veterinarian, SynOsteon is an all-natural feed supplement, formulated to help support bone development and remodeling
Every SynNutra product is Veterinarian-formulated and tested.
Promotes Resilient Bone Development
- Non-prescription
- Supports bone development and remodeling in training horses
- Developed for healthy tendons and ligaments
- Helps promote bone strength in performance horses
- All natural
- No banned substances
- No withdrawal times
- Unique ingredient profile
- Made in the USA from internationally-sourced ingredients
Open To Read More About SynOsteon
Healthy bone requires a collagen matrix for flexibility as well as a support medium for calcium and phosphorus deposition. SynOsteon® is formulated to support the development of a healthy frame for healthy bone. Nutrients such as silicon are key in building and maintaining collagen, while menaquinone (vitamin K2) and β-glucans stimulate calcium deposition in bone. Vitamin D is necessary for nutritional calcium absorption. Icariins from Herba epimedii (epimedium) limit osteoclastic bone resorption and promote osteoblast activity.
SynOsteon® was designed to support healthy bone development and remodeling with three distinct horse populations in mind:
- Young unfit racehorses in early training. These horses should be supplemented daily when they begin training and continue through the time they are racing at full distance.
- Racehorses that have had significant time out of training (over one month) The longer fit horses are out of training the more calcium phosphate they resorb from their bones.
- Racehorses that have developed bucked shins, tibial or humeral stress fractures. For all of these conditions it is important for your horse to be evaluated by a veterinarian. Please see Dr. Simpson’s article, A Practical Guide to Managing Bone Development in Young Racehorses, published in the 2025 edition of Thoroughbred Trainers Information Guide.






