Agni in Samskrita means "fire", and according to Ayurveda, Agni happens to be the entity that is responsible for all digestive and metabolic processes in the human beings.[1]

Classification of Agni based on its location

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Depending upon the stage of metabolism where a specific Agni is functionally active, Agni has been classified into three sub-classes: 'Jaṭharāgni', 'Bhūtāgni' and 'Dhātvagni'.[2][3]

Jaṭharāgni

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While Jaṭharāgni acts on the food in the digestive tract and converts it into absorbable form, the Bhūtāgni acts after the digested material has been absorbed.

Bhūtāgni

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Bhūtāgni is of 5 types. Each of these 5 acts on the 5 primordial constituents of the absorbed food: Earth, Water, Fire, Air, and Space. These 5 Bhutagnis transform the substrates into such form that can be assimilated at tissue level.

Dhātvagni

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The third class of Agni, the Dhātvagni, acts at the level of tissue metabolism and is helpful in the tissue nourishment tissue metabolism. This is of 7 types based on the kind of tissue that it helps nourishing.

Classification of Agni based on its strength

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Further, Ayurveda recognizes four functional states of Agni: Samāgni (regular), Vişamāgni (irregular), Tīkşņāgni (intense) and Mandāgni (weak).[4][5]

Samāgni

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Samāgni ensures complete digestion of the food ingested at the proper time without any irregularity. Its activity is neither too intense nor too weak. It is just appropriate and therefore, is ideal too. This results when all Doshas, Vata-Pitta-Kapha are in a state of equilibrium.

Vişamāgni

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Vişamāgni represents an unpredictable state of Agni, which is due to the dominance of Vayu. It sometimes quickly digests the food and at other times it does so very slowly, representing unpredictability.

Tīkşņāgni

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Tīkşņāgni results because of the dominance of Pitta which is intense, and hence, it easily digests even a very heavy meal, in a very short span of time.

Mandāgni

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Mandāgni is opposite to the Tīkşņāgni: it is subdued in its activity. This Agni is unable to digest and metabolize even a small quantity of food. This state of Agni is a result of the dominance of Kapha.

References

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  1. ^ Agrawal, Akash Kumar; Yadav, C. R.; Meena, M. S. (2010). "Physiological aspects of Agni". AYU. 31 (3): 395–398. doi:10.4103/0974-8520.77159. PMC 3221079. PMID 22131747.
  2. ^ "Bhutagni, Bhūtāgni, Bhuta-agni: 4 definitions". wisdomlib. 24 June 2016.
  3. ^ "Concepts of Agni". athreyaherbs.com.
  4. ^ Mishra, Lakshmi C. (2003). Scientific Basis for Ayurvedic Therapies. CRC Press. pp. 307–322. ISBN 0-8493-1366-X.
  5. ^ Singh, Aparna; Singh, Girish; Patwardhan, Kishor; Gehlot, Sangeeta (2017). "Development, Validation, and Verification of a Self-Assessment Tool to Estimate Agnibala (Digestive Strength)". J Evid Based Complementary Altern Med. 22 (1): 134–140. doi:10.1177/2156587216656117. PMC 5871217. PMID 27381899.