Well the water dilutes if but urine is just the body excreting chemicals and waste.
The pigment that gives urine its normal yellow color is called urochrome.
The colour of urine in diabetes (both, diabetes mellitus and diabetes insipidus) is very very pale yellow (almost colourless). This is because diabetes is characterised by polyuria ie, increased volume of urine output, which is majorly due to increased excretion of water from the body, the quantity of pigment urochrome (which gives the normal pale yellow colour to urine) remaining the same. This makes urine in diabetic patients more pale, almost colourless
If "normal" fluid intake is assumed to mean a properly hydrated person, urine should be clear to slightly pale yellow; the less colour, the better.
Urobilin can be degraded into urochrome, which is normally present in urine and responsible for its characteristically yellow color.
Urine contains breakdown of bile pigments, such as urobilin (urochrome), and stercobilin, which are yellow.see:http://www.expasy.ch/cgi-bin/show_image?L5&downhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UrobilinThe yellow colour comes from the pigment bilirubin which is a product of red blood cell break down.
The color of urine depends on type of diet alone and not skin color or race. Normal urine color ranges from light yellow to dark yellow.
This could be called colouration, the colour of urine, tinting, etc.. depending on your context.
clear transparency is the normal characteristic of the urine
No. Normal urine should be sterile.
Urine gets its normal yellow color from a pigment called urochrome, which is a product of the breakdown of hemoglobin from old red blood cells. The concentration of urochrome in urine can vary depending on hydration levels and diet.
No, 3+ albumin in the urine is not normal.
No Normal urine should not include any traces of blood.