Abstract

BackgroundUrine production in the kidney is generally thought to be an energy-intensive process requiring large amounts of metabolic activity to power active transport mechanisms. This study uses a thermodynamic analysis to evaluate the minimum work requirements for urine production in the human kidney and provide a new perspective on the energy costs of urine production. In this study, black-box models are used to compare the Gibbs energy inflow and outflow of the overall kidney and physiologically-based subsections in the kidney, to calculate the work of separation for urine production.ResultsThe results describe the work done during urine production broadly and for specific scenarios. Firstly, it shows glomerular filtration in both kidneys requires work to be done at a rate of 5 mW under typical conditions in the kidney. Thereafter, less than 54 mW is sufficient to concentrate the filtrate into urine, even in the extreme cases considered. We have also related separation work in the kidney with the excretion rates of individual substances, including sodium, potassium, urea and water. Lastly, the thermodynamic calculations indicate that plasma dilution significantly reduces the energy cost of separating urine from blood.ConclusionsA comparison of these thermodynamic results with physiological reference points, elucidates how various factors affect the energy cost of the process. Surprisingly little energy is required to produce human urine, seeing that double the amount of work can theoretically be done with all the energy provided through pressure drop of blood flow through the kidneys, while the metabolic energy consumption of the kidneys could possibly drive almost one hundred times more separation work. Nonetheless, the model’s outputs, which are summarised graphically, show the separation work’s nuances, which can be further analysed in the context of more empirical evidence.

Highlights

  • Urine production in the kidney is generally thought to be an energyintensive process requiring large amounts of metabolic activity to power active transport mechanisms

  • It focuses on the work done in the broader urine production processes and outlines the relationship between excretion rates and minimum work requirements, which may be characteristic of the system

  • The daily urine volume ranges on the graph where ΔGtotal < 0 are ranges where the work supplied by the pressure drop across the system is more than the work of separation

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Urine production in the kidney is generally thought to be an energyintensive process requiring large amounts of metabolic activity to power active transport mechanisms. This study uses a thermodynamic analysis to evaluate the minimum work requirements for urine production in the human kidney and provide a new perspective on the energy costs of urine production. While the energy consumption of the organs has been established and while multiple mechanisms have been studied [15], what has not been established clearly is the minimum work required for the kidneys to produce urine. This paper is aimed at providing an alternative perspective to urine production, as opposed to studying specific mechanisms and metabolic energy consumption. It focuses on the work done in the broader urine production processes and outlines the relationship between excretion rates and minimum work requirements, which may be characteristic of the system. This paper builds on this research to determine the energy requirements for urine production by the overall system under a wide variety of conditions, without considering specific mechanisms

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call