THE ANALOGY
Picture transgelin as the rehab coach in the gym.
Your horse can show up to rehab strong-willed, motivated, and ready to work — and still re-injure if no one's guiding the program. The job of the coach isn't to make them work harder. It's to make sure they work the right things in the right order.
Transgelin signals to fibroblasts and stem cells during tendon and ligament repair — helping them grow, differentiate, and lay down tissue in a coordinated way instead of just piling cells into the gap.
“More effort with no direction is how horses get re-injured. Direction is what turns effort into recovery.”
Good repair looks coordinated. Cells know when to divide, when to specialize, and when to start producing matrix. Transgelin is one of the proteins involved in that coordination.
HOW IT WORKS IN THE HORSE
What transgelin does during repair
Signals to repair cells
Transgelin participates in the molecular signaling that tells fibroblasts and progenitor cells when to grow and when to differentiate.
Guides tissue formation
It's part of the framework that helps repair cells produce the right kind of tissue — load-bearing matrix, not just bulk fill.
Supports organized rebuilding
When the signaling environment is intact, repair tends to be more organized and the resulting tissue more functional.
Part of the native protein toolkit your horse already uses.
equicenta® CTM delivers transgelin as part of the native protein growth and differentiation toolkit found in normal musculoskeletal tissues — supporting repair cells the way the body already does.
Ask your veterinarian whether equicenta® CTM could be part of your horse's plan.
Every case is different. Your veterinarian is the right person to weigh whether a regenerative approach fits the diagnosis, the rehab plan, and your horse.
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