There is none. Most labs cannot get a good reading if the urine sample is very diluted and will know this is the reason. At best it would require submitting another sample to be tested. Some states consider submitting a diluted sample as a violation and will still obtain another to get a good reading.
No. The urine you provide for a drug test must come directly from your bladder. Taking it from the toilet will dilute it, and the lab will know that, and you will automatically be considered to test positive.
nope, well, kind of. You can fool the test by using fake urine or by drinking a lot of water to dilute your urine the night before.
A key lab test used to help diagnose diabetes insipidus is the water deprivation test. This test assesses the body's ability to concentrate urine in response to dehydration. Patients are deprived of water for a certain period, and their urine output and concentration are measured. If the urine remains dilute despite dehydration, it may indicate diabetes insipidus.
Of course. You're screwed.
No
If your urine is too diluted, the test may show a false -. It's best to test with your first morning urine to ensure it is at it's highest concentration.
You can't dilute urine, because the only thing you'd have to dilute it with is tap water, and that would show up on the urinalysis. Urine does not contain H2O. It's been chemically changed by the time it comes out as urine.
not necessarily, but certain drug tests can ascertain that you did dilute your urine and they can and will fail you.
Depends on what kind of urine
It will work.
No, because it is simply not urine.
No. A "dilute drug test" is one where the test can't find certain levels of certain enzymes. Those enzymes are also in blood, so you're safe. You do, however, still have blood in your urine, where it should not be.