Abstract

Understanding how nature drives entropy production offers novel insights regarding patient care. Whilst energy is always preserved and energy gradients irreversibly dissipate (thus producing entropy), increasing evidence suggests that they do so in the most optimal means possible. For living complex non-equilibrium systems to create a healthy internal emergent order, they must continuously produce entropy over time. The Maximum Entropy Production Principle (MEPP) highlights nature’s drive for non-equilibrium systems to augment their entropy production if possible. This physical drive is hypothesized to be responsible for the spontaneous formation of fractal structures in space (e.g., multi-scale self-similar tree-like vascular structures that optimize delivery to and clearance from an organ system) and time (e.g., complex heart and respiratory rate variability); both are ubiquitous and essential for physiology and health. Second, human entropy production, measured by heat production divided by temperature, is hypothesized to relate to both metabolism and consciousness, dissipating oxidative energy gradients and reducing information into meaning and memory, respectively. Third, both MEPP and natural selection are hypothesized to drive enhanced functioning and adaptability, selecting states with robust basilar entropy production, as well as the capacity to enhance entropy production in response to exercise, heat stress, and illness. Finally, a targeted focus on optimizing our patients’ entropy production has the potential to improve health and clinical outcomes. With the implications of developing a novel understanding of health, illness, and treatment strategies, further exploration of this uncharted ground will offer value.

Highlights

  • Physicians are fundamentally physicists at heart, seeking to understand why their patients are ill, so that they can improve the care they provide

  • Our ability to continuously burn oxygen into carbon dioxide is essential for our health; what we do not generally appreciate is how this is central to the process of entropy production

  • Understanding the clinical importance of entropy production requires exploring the thermodynamic physics of physiology

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Summary

Introduction

Physicians are fundamentally physicists at heart, seeking to understand why their patients are ill, so that they can improve the care they provide. Novel concepts are reviewed and discussed at a high level to try to enable a broad multidisciplinary readership, with the ultimate aim of leading to enhancing our understanding of health and illness. This is an exploratory paper lacking in quantitative rigor, respectful of the complex subject matter and the scientists who perform more in depth study of the topics discussed. The aim is to stimulate critical appraisal and an improved understanding of the physics of physiology, in order to better care for our patients

Introduction to Entropy
Entropy Production and Life
Interaction between MEPP and Evolution
Informational Entropy Production
Evaluation and Implications
Limitations
Conclusions
Full Text
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