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Your Dog Is Probably Dehydrated

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In my practice, I ask every client: "How much water does your dog drink?" The answer is almost always: "I do not know." Followed by: "He has a bowl. He drinks when he is thirsty."

That is not good enough. Most dogs do not drink enough. And dehydration affects everything: metabolism, digestion, kidney function, joint lubrication, and energy levels. A chronically dehydrated dog is a dog operating at 80% capacity. I see it constantly. And it is so easy to fix.

How Much Is Enough?

The rule of thumb: 1 ounce of water per pound of body weight per day. A 50-pound dog needs about 50 ounces (1.5 liters). More in hot weather, during exercise, or on dry food diets. Kibble has almost no moisture. Wet food provides about 70% of daily water needs.

But here is the problem: dogs do not have a strong thirst drive. They evolved to get moisture from prey. Domestic dogs on dry kibble are chronically under-hydrated compared to their biological needs. Bruno was drinking maybe half what he needed before I paid attention. I only noticed because his urine was dark yellow. Gross but informative.

Signs of Dehydration

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Simple Tricks to Increase Intake

Bruno drinks more now that I added a second bowl in my office. He was just too lazy to walk to the kitchen. Sometimes the solution is embarrassingly simple. And sometimes your dog is just lazy. Bruno is both.

Dave's senior dog article mentions adding a second water bowl for older dogs who stop going downstairs as often. Same principle, same solution. Great minds think alike. Or lazy dogs train us well.

โ€” Dr. Anika Patel

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