AGNI AND CELLULAR BIOENERGETICS: AN INTEGRATIVE PHYSIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.4238/vc3ks936Keywords:
Agni, Cellular bioenergetics, physiology, digestive fire, dhatvagniAbstract
Background: In Ayurvedic physiology, Agni is regarded as the fundamental transformative force responsible for digestion, metabolism, tissue nourishment, and maintenance of life. Classical texts such as Charaka Samhita and Ashtanga Hridaya describe Agni as the central determinant of health, emphasizing that balanced Agni sustains vitality, strength, and longevity, whereas its impairment leads to disease. Despite its foundational importance, Agni has often been narrowly interpreted as digestive fire, limiting its broader physiological understanding.
Methods: A classical textual review was undertaken using primary Ayurvedic sources including Charaka Samhita, Sushruta Samhita and Ashtanga Hridaya. Descriptions of Jatharagni, Dhatvagni, and Bhutagni were analyzed and conceptually compared with contemporary knowledge of cellular metabolism, mitochondrial function, ATP production, and thermodynamic regulation. Correlative analysis was performed to identify physiological parallels between Ayurvedic and modern bioenergetic frameworks.
Results: The strong conceptual parallels between Agni and cellular bioenergetics. Jatharagni corresponds to digestive and absorptive metabolism, while Dhatvagni aligns with intracellular enzymatic reactions and mitochondrial energy production. The qualitative states of Agni—Sama, Manda, and Tikshna—reflect variations in metabolic rate and homeostatic efficiency. Ama parallels impaired metabolism and toxic by-product accumulation.
Conclusion: Agni may be understood as a multidimensional bioenergetic principle governing transformation, energy production, and metabolic equilibrium at systemic and cellular levels. This integrative perspective offers a scientific framework for bridging Ayurvedic physiology with modern metabolic science.
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