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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Water needs of Labrador and Alaskan sled dogs during multi-day

By Stephens-Brown, Lara & Davis, Michael·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2018·College of Veterinary Medicine·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Water requirements of canine athletes during multi-day exercise.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of Labrador retrievers and Alaskan Huskies were studied to understand how much water they need during multi-day exercise. The dogs engaged in activities like explosive detection and mid-distance racing, and researchers found that their daily water needs could increase significantly, sometimes reaching up to 45% of their body water during intense exercise. The study highlighted that the amount of work the dogs do is the main factor affecting their water requirements. This information can help pet owners ensure their active dogs stay properly hydrated during long activities.

People also search for: how much water should my dog drink during exercise · Labrador retriever hydration needs · Alaskan Husky water requirements during racing

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Exercise increases water requirements, but there is little information regarding water loss in dogs performing multi-day exercise OBJECTIVES: Quantify the daily water turnover of working dogs during multi-day exercise and establish the suitability of SC administration of tracer to determine water turnover. ANIMALS: Fifteen privately owned Labrador retrievers trained for explosive detection duties and 16 privately owned Alaskan Huskies conditioned for mid-distance racing. METHODS: All dogs received 0.3 g DO/kg body weight by IV infusion, gavage, or SC injection before the start of a multi-day exercise challenge. Explosive detection dogs conducted 5 days of simulated off-leash explosive detection activity. Alaskan sled dogs completed a mid-distance stage race totaling 222 km in 2 days. Total body water (TBW) and daily water turnover were calculated using both indicator dilution and elimination regression techniques. RESULTS: Total body water (% of body weight) varied from 60% ± 8.6% in minimally conditioned Labrador retrievers to 74% ± 4.5% in highly conditioned Labrador retrievers. Daily water turnover was as high as 45% of TBW during exercise in cold conditions. There was no effect of sex or speed on daily water turnover. There was good agreement between results calculated using the indicator dilution approach and those calculated using a semilog linear regression approach when indicator isotope was administered IV or SC. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: Water requirements are influenced primarily by the amount of work done. SC administration of isotope-labeled water offers a simple and accurate alternative method for metabolic studies.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29572954/