I Hate Dialysis Message Board
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
November 26, 2024, 03:40:29 PM

Login with username, password and session length
Search:     Advanced search
532606 Posts in 33561 Topics by 12678 Members
Latest Member: astrobridge
* Home Help Search Login Register
+  I Hate Dialysis Message Board
|-+  Dialysis Discussion
| |-+  Dialysis: News Articles
| | |-+  Universal law of urination found in mammals
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. « previous next »
Pages: [1] Go Down Print
Author Topic: Universal law of urination found in mammals  (Read 2549 times)
Bill Peckham
Elite Member
*****
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
Posts: 3057


WWW
« on: October 21, 2013, 09:06:36 PM »

http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn24425-universal-law-of-urination-found-in-mammals.html

You'll never look at Dumbo in the same way again. Elephants, cows, goats and dogs all take roughly 21 seconds to empty their bladders. A "law of urination" now explains the physics behind what happens when you just gotta go.

Patricia Yang and colleagues at the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta use high-speed video to study how fluids and animals interact; they have previously investigated how dogs shake themselves dry.

While filming at a local zoo, they noticed that animals of various sizes, both male and female, took a similar time to empty their bladders.

The team filmed rats, dogs, goats, cows and elephants urinating and gathered footage from YouTube of others relieving themselves. Combining this with data on mass, bladder pressure and urethra size, they were able to create a mathematical model of urinary systems to show why mammals take the same time to empty their bladder, despite the difference in bladder size.

Previous models have only considered the effects of bladder pressure, but the length of the urethra turns out to be important as well.

Elephant pee

"Most of the research is on humans or animals smaller than humans," says Yang. In these species, the effect of gravity can be ignored. That's not true of elephants, whose urethral dimensions are comparable to a household pipe: a diameter of around 10 centimetres and a length of about 1 metre.

In this case size matters, as it means urine has time to reach higher speeds. This means that as it travels down the pipe, the urine accelerates and its flow rate rises, resulting in an elephant's large bladder being emptied in a similar time to those of smaller animals.

Medium-sized animals like dogs and goats have shorter urethras, so get less of a gravitational boost: their flow is slower. In addition, they have smaller bladders. The result of both effects is that they empty their bladders in roughly the same time as elephants.

According to the team's model, an animal's size does make a difference to urination time – but only very slightly. Their law of urination says that the time a mammal takes to empty a full bladder is proportional to the animal's mass raised to the power of a sixth, meaning even very large changes in mass have little effect on the time.

There are limits to this scaling. Gravity only plays a small role in the urination of very small mammals like rats and bats, which urinate in under a second. Instead, viscosity and surface tension dominate, which explains why their urine is released as a stream of individual drops rather than the continuous jet seen in larger mammals.

The team will present the results at the American Physical Society Division of Fluid Dynamics meeting in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, next month. Yang hopes the law of urination might help diagnose urinary problems in elephants and other large mammals. It might even inspire new designs for water towers, which also pump water using the force of gravity, she says.

You can check out the entire study at the preprint archive arXiv: "Law of Urination: all mammals empty their bladders over the same duration."




If you follow the top link there is video of animals peeing, kind of dialysis porn.
« Last Edit: October 21, 2013, 09:09:24 PM by Bill Peckham » Logged

http://www.billpeckham.com  "Dialysis from the sharp end of the needle" tracking  industry news and trends - in advocacy, reimbursement, politics and the provision of dialysis
Incenter Hemodialysis: 1990 - 2001
Home Hemodialysis: 2001 - Present
NxStage System One Cycler 2007 - Present
        * 4 to 6 days a week 30 Liters (using PureFlow) @ ~250 Qb ~ 8 hour per treatment FF~28
Dman73
Full Member
***
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
Posts: 114


« Reply #1 on: October 22, 2013, 07:35:15 AM »

D patients are human mammals with unique characteristics.
 
We differ from other mammals that we are on a superior cognitive plane because we have developed language.

There is no explanation as to why we have this ability other than that our original genetic structure has been altered many years ago by a superior unworldly intelligence where they have an interest and monitor our development as we are the decedents of the starchild.

Why some of us can survive without the ability to pee is because of our creativity and technical ability. It drives the healthy people nuts when I can drive them somewhere and never stop the car except for gas. I can sit through an entire movie, sports event and any other activity without the need to get up and go sometimes missing the best parts of these events.

For those who get a transplant the ability to pee is restored along with freedom to be off the machine but watch out you may miss some of the best parts.   
« Last Edit: October 22, 2013, 07:36:20 AM by Dman73 » Logged

hd 73
tx  87
hd 01

by the yard life is hard by the inch it's a cinch...
Bill Peckham
Elite Member
*****
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
Posts: 3057


WWW
« Reply #2 on: October 22, 2013, 06:31:29 PM »

I was flying across country in a window seat drinking soda's and waters throughout and the person on the aisle kept asking if I needed to get up - suggesting even - that I use the bathroom. Nope. I'm fine - she probably still wonders what the hell was going on.
Logged

http://www.billpeckham.com  "Dialysis from the sharp end of the needle" tracking  industry news and trends - in advocacy, reimbursement, politics and the provision of dialysis
Incenter Hemodialysis: 1990 - 2001
Home Hemodialysis: 2001 - Present
NxStage System One Cycler 2007 - Present
        * 4 to 6 days a week 30 Liters (using PureFlow) @ ~250 Qb ~ 8 hour per treatment FF~28
Pages: [1] Go Up Print 
« previous next »
 

Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP SMF 2.0.17 | SMF © 2019, Simple Machines | Terms and Policies Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!