Increased and overly concentrated.
Diabetes insipidus doesn't produce enough ADH or respond to it, thus produces too much urine. SIADH is the opposite and retains too much water, rather than excreting it excessively in DI.
There are many things that affect an animal's urine output such as food intake. Beverage intake also affects an animal's urine output.
For a male OR female, drinking about 2 liters of fluid a day, the normal urine output should be 800 to 2,000 milliliters a day. Urine output below 500 milliliters a day is considered a low urine output and is a sign of disease.
Certainly. Decrease cardiac output would mean a decreased in blood flow to the kidneys, which would lead to reduced filtration, therefore urine output.
Decreased urine output is also known as Oliguria. Renal malfunctions or dehydration can cause Oliguria. The ICD-9 code for decreased urine output/oliguria is 788.5.
There are various factors which might decrease urine output. For example, if a person is dehydrated then they will urinate less.
The pituitary is a part of the endocrine system. There are two parts: they are the anterior and the posterior pituitary.Remember that pituitary problems can lead in something called SIADH, especially after brain surgeries, nurses must evaluate vital signs critically because something as little as a urine output can tell you if a person has SIADH which is syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone, which means you are producing too much ADH, which means you are retaining fluid in your body. The other condition is called DI or Diabetes Insipidus which means you are not producing enough ADH, and you are losing a ton of water.this is evident in patients after brain surgeries and is as easy as looking at a urine output and specific gravity and evaluating them.If a patient's urine output is 300 ml in one hour and it is very dilute, you can guess that this is a problem with DIIf a patient's urine output is 10 ml in one hour and it is very concentrated, the patient is retaining water obviously which can lead to renal failure because the heart is working really hard to get blood there so it has nutrients but this can't happen because the heart is full of blood itself and can't pump as well leading to a decrease in cardiac output and possible heart failure and renal (kidney failure) can ensue.
You should be aiming for a urine output above 1 ml/kg/hr
UOP
alejandro is the answer
Volume and Time
Usually when there is less than normal urine output it is associated with dehydration so the way it is described in a chart is "diminished urine output noted".