For dogs, the standard “rule of thumb” water intake is:
Normal Daily Water Intake
About:
40-60 mL/kg/day
Some internists use:
- 50 mL/kg/day as the mental midpoint
Because veterinarians love round numbers almost as much as we love pretending the owner can accurately measure water intake in a three-dog household featuring one Labrador and a toilet-drinker.
Quick Examples
10 kg dog
Normal:
- about 400-600 mL/day
20 kg dog
Normal:
- about 800-1200 mL/day
30 kg dog
Normal:
- about 1.2-1.8 liters/day
When Do We Call It Polydipsia?
Generally:
>90-100 mL/kg/day
raises concern for true polydipsia.
That’s the classic threshold.
So:
- 20 kg dog drinking >2 liters/day
starts becoming suspicious.
Important Caveats
Water intake varies with:
- canned vs dry food
- exercise
- ambient temperature
- panting
- lactation
- fever
- steroid use
- sodium intake
A dog eating canned food may drink surprisingly little because they’re already getting water in the diet.
Meanwhile a husky running around South Carolina in July may drink like a malfunctioning fire hydrant and still be normal.
Clinically Useful Shortcut
Many clinicians mentally divide it like this:
| Intake | Interpretation |
|---|---|
| <50 mL/kg/day | Often normal |
| 50-90 mL/kg/day | Gray zone |
| >100 mL/kg/day | Usually abnormal |
Urine Production Rule of Thumb
Normal urine output:
- roughly 1-2 mL/kg/hour
Polyuria:
- often >4-5 mL/kg/hour
One Very Helpful Practical Pearl
Owners often overestimate drinking.
A lot.
Because:
- multiple pets
- spilled water
- evaporation
- refilling habits
- “he seems thirsty”
Actual measurement over 2-3 days is gold-standard useful.
Measured intake plus:
- USG
- serum sodium
- chemistry panel
usually gets you much closer to the truth.
Tiny internal medicine detective work. Everyone standing around a urine sample pretending the kidneys aren’t running the whole show.
Reasons a Dog Might Have a HYPOSTHENURIC URINE
(This dog has a USPG of 1.002)
Yes, Doc Jay. Historically, there absolutely were therapeutic/functional tests used to sort out causes of hyposthenuria and PU/PD. Some are still used carefully. Some have fallen out of favor because they can be dangerous if done cavalierly. Which, naturally, humans did for decades anyway.
The classic approaches are:
1. Desmopressin (DDAVP) Trial
This is the safest and most clinically useful “therapeutic diagnosis” now.
Used to evaluate for:
- Central Diabetes Insipidus
vs - nephrogenic DI
vs - psychogenic polydipsia
Principle
Desmopressin is synthetic ADH.
If the animal lacks ADH:
- urine concentrates dramatically after DDAVP
If kidneys cannot respond:
- little or no response
Expected Responses
Central DI
Big response:
- water intake decreases
- urine specific gravity rises
Often dramatic.
Example:
- USG 1.002 → 1.020+
Nephrogenic DI
Minimal or no response.
Because the kidney is ignoring ADH already.
Psychogenic Polydipsia
Variable/mild response.
These patients already have ADH.
The issue is excessive water intake and medullary washout.
Sometimes after several days of controlled water intake plus DDAVP, concentrating ability improves somewhat.
Practical Veterinary Method
Typical dog/cat:
- ophthalmic DDAVP drops in conjunctiva
or - intranasal solution orally/conjunctivally
Monitor:
- water intake
- urine specific gravity
over several days.
2. Water Deprivation Test
Classic. Powerful. Potentially dangerous. The endocrine equivalent of:
“Let’s see whether dehydration kills the patient before the kidneys decide to cooperate.”
This is NOT something to do casually.
Principle
Normally:
- dehydration → ADH release → concentrated urine
If urine stays hyposthenuric despite dehydration:
- DI becomes likely
Interpretation
Primary Polydipsia
Eventually concentrates urine.
Central DI
Fails initially, then improves after DDAVP.
Nephrogenic DI
Fails even after DDAVP.
Why Dangerous?
If the patient truly has DI:
- severe hypernatremia
- neurologic injury
- collapse
can occur.
So modern medicine often prefers:
- imaging
- baseline labs
- DDAVP trial
before formal deprivation testing.
3. Salt Loading
Historically discussed more in physiology than practical veterinary medicine.
You mentioned feeding salt. Intellectually reasonable. Clinically messy.
Why it’s unreliable
Salt should:
- increase plasma osmolality
- stimulate endogenous ADH
If urine still remains hyposthenuric:
- impaired ADH pathway suspected
BUT:
- risky
- poorly standardized
- confounded by drinking behavior
- can worsen hypernatremia
So it’s generally not a preferred diagnostic approach.
4. Controlled Water Restriction / Medullary Washout Recovery
This is sometimes clinically informative.
If chronic psychogenic polydipsia caused medullary washout:
- gradual normalization of water intake
- monitored restriction
- time
may restore concentrating ability over days.
Urine specific gravity slowly rises.
That suggests:
- kidneys can respond
- concentrating gradient had been washed out
5. Measure Osmolality
Modern workup often includes:
- serum osmolality
- urine osmolality
because USG alone is imperfect.
Patterns help distinguish:
- DI
- psychogenic polydipsia
- renal disease
Important Clinical Point
Before chasing DI aggressively, you rule out the common offenders first:
- hypercalcemia
- hypokalemia
- renal disease
- pyometra
- hyperadrenocorticism
- liver disease
- drugs
Because true DI is relatively uncommon.
Meanwhile Cushing’s, steroids, psychogenic drinking, and medullary washout are out there everywhere causing chaos like raccoons in a campground.
And one more thing, Sir:
If a patient is making truly hyposthenuric urine consistently, that actually tells you the kidneys retain some tubular function. They are actively diluting. That’s diagnostically useful and somewhat reassuring compared with dead-flat isosthenuria.





