Artificial intelligent assistant

Is the amount of phosphoric acid added to colas enough to disrupt the function of the kidney over the long term? Both Coca-Cola and Pepsi add phosphoric acid $H_3PO_4$ to their colas to give them a signature "bite". The kidneys use a phosphoric acid/dihydrogen phosphate/hydrogen phosphate homeostasis as one mechanism to eliminate/excrete excess acid from the body. The issue of whether sodas containing phosphoric acid can exacerbate osteoporosis and related conditions has been explored here and in some detail on Wikipedia, but I'm more interested in direct effects on the kidney. I'm interested to know if the overall renal physiology is adversely affected by extra phosphoric acid that long-term moderate consumption (say a single 2L bottle per week for a year) of soda would introduce (including interrupting or saturating the Na-Pi transporter)?

The phosphoric acid in cola will contribute to dietary intake of phosphate. I may be missing something, but, since the transporter functions to reabsorb phosphate that has been filtered out at the glomerulus, excess phosphate will spill over into the urine.

According to Wikipedia the RDA for phosphorus is 700 mg and the tolerable upper intake level is 4000 mg. Coca cola contains 17 mg phosphorus (as phosphate) 100 ml-1 (which is 340 mg in 2 L)

According to this source,

> in the United States, an average person drinks 412 8-ounce drinks — or 3296 ounces — of Coke per year.

This works out at 9 oz per day = 266 ml = 45 mg phosphorus

For comparison (from here):

* white flour contains 595 mg 100 g-1
* one boiled egg contains 220 mg
* canned salmon contains 240 mg 100 g-1

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