Abstract

Water intake and urine measures were evaluated in dogs offered tap water (TW) or a nutrient-enriched water (NW) supplement while fed dry food with ad libitum TW in a bucket. Baseline (day-7) urine specific gravity (USG) was analyzed from healthy, adult small breed dogs (n = 21; 2–11 years). Dogs (N = 16) were selected with ≥1.015 USG, then equally divided into 2 groups balanced for USG. Groups received either TW or NW in a bowl for 56 days. Dose for each dog was 0.5:1 water-to-calorie ratio (mL:kcal ME/d) from days 1–49 to evaluate sustained intake of a moderate volume, or 2:1 water-to-calorie ratio from days 50–56 to evaluate short-term intake of a large volume, based on baseline food calorie intake. Daily food calorie and total liquid intake (TLI; g/d; sum of NW or TW in a bowl and bucket water) was used to calculate weekly intake. USG was measured on days −7, 14, 42, 56. Calorie intake was not different (P > 0.49). A significant (P < 0.001) time-by-treatment interaction resulted for TLI with baseline similar between groups and no difference between weeks for the TW group. Following baseline, NW group had increased (P < 0.05) TLI every week, except for week 2 (P = 0.07). A significant (P < 0.002) time-by-treatment interaction resulted for USG, with baseline similar between groups and no difference between sampling days for the TW group (varied by ≤ 0.006 g/mL), whereas NW group was lower (P < 0.01) on days 42 (1.018 g/mL) and 56 (1.014 g/mL) vs. baseline (1.026 g/mL). This study indicates that all dogs offered the NW supplement increased their TLI and produced a more dilute urine, which suggests an improvement in indices associated with chronic hydration.

Highlights

  • Estimates of daily water requirements have been reported for dogs [1]

  • Calculated daily total water intake (TWI; the sum of free water (FW) consumed by drinking [tap water (TW) and the water-only component of nutrient-enriched water (NW)], Metabolic water (MW) [conversion from food and NW nutrients], and food moisture) was determined and used to calculate mean daily water-to-calorie intake ratios

  • Water needs in healthy dogs are not well defined and little is known regarding how incremental changes in water intake translate into changes in blood or urine measures associated with hydration

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Summary

Introduction

No consensus exists for how to define optimal hydration, optimal water intake volume, or the overall impact of adequate hydration on health in dogs. This results in the continued reliance on a nutritional recommendation of always having fresh water available for the pet’s own desire to ingest water and establish individual eu-hydration [1]. Water intake volume has been reported as mL/kg of body weight, mL/kg of dry matter ingested, and water-to-calorie intake ratio as mL/kcal of ME ingested [1].

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