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  Constitutional
    Medicine
  Constitutional
    Diagnosis
  Constitutional
   Acupuncture
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 Introduction

  New medical paradigm 

 Constitution Medicine

 Uniqe Organ Theory

 Characteristics of
    the Four Constitutions

 Problems with the Four 
   Constitutional Classifications

 Eight-Constitution Medicine 

The First Soyangin    

 The Second Soyangin     

 The First Soumin

 The Second Soumin     

 The First Teumin    

 The Second Teumin

The First Teyangin  

 The Second Teyangin    

 Practice of Distinguishing     Between Constitutions

 O-ring test to determine     constitutions


Constitution Medicine from Korea


Background on Constitution Medicine

A brand new science was launched by Lee Jema (1836-1900) a century ago in the latter part of the Korean Chosun Dynasty.

In 1894 Lee Jema asserted in his book Dongyi Soose Bowon (Longevity and Life Preservation in Oriental Medicine), that each person is born with a different organ structure and therefore have different characters, temperaments, and physiological and pathological phenomena. He asserted that even though people have the same illness, they need different medicines depending on their respective natural organ structures.

This assertion of his was based on his own experience. Even though he was a medical doctor, he suffered from a chronic illness.  
He tried everything to cure himself, but was unable to heal himself. He cured other people with similar symptoms, but the same medicine was ineffective on himself. This lead him to repeated research into the reason, and he came to realize that, in contrast to the others, he had a rare constitution, taeyangin, so the cures for others couldn't work on him. Lee Jema finally cured himself, creating his own recipe appropriate to his constitution, and with that personal experience he was able to work out the theory of constitution medicine.

His book Dongyi Soose Bowon has the reasons for the deficiency and excess syndromes of the organs, which vary with the individual; the way to distinguish the different constitutions by physiological and pathological characteristics and figure; the list of medicines and prescriptions classified by him according to the constitutions; and his experiences in practical healing.

In its time, that book was very amazing and revolutionary.  Lee Jema in his book not only made the extraordinary assertion that distinguishing syndromes is nonsense because the eight main syndromes that are the essence of Chinese medicine (yin, yang, cold, heat, external, internal, excess and deficiency) are already set by the human constitution, but also that illness of the six meridians doesn't come as orderly as prescribed by the famous Chinese doctor Zhang Zhongjing in his book Shanghanlun; that the phases of illness are already set according to the natural born constitution of the individual.

Besides, he evolved his unique organ theory different from that of traditional Chinese medicine. He dared to criticize the system of Chinese medicine uncritically passed down for millennia, and even shook its roots, indeed a surprising event given the situation of the time, when Chinese science was dominant.

The concept of constitution defined by Lee Jema can be summed up thusly:

Firstly, people are born with different organ structures.
Secondly, these differences affect the form and looks of the body, so a person has a unique figure according to his constitution.
Thirdly, the differences affect the temperament and personality, so a person has a different character.
Fourthly, the differences affect the physiology and pathology of the human body, so the human body manifests different phenomena.
Fifthly, all these differences form a constitution, and therefore a person must use a different cure and method of health care according to his constitution.

However, the constitution theory of Lee Jema until recently wasn't widely accepted even among doctors of Oriental medicine, and only a few scientists studied it and kept it alive.
The value of his theory was not much acknowledged, because it was too new a theory to be easily linked to the existing system of Chinese medicine, and too difficult a theory for existing scientists to easily accept.

There was another reason: this scientific system had its own limits.  For example, in order to apply constitution medicine to a patient in clinical practice, it is necessary to first classify the patient's constitution, but the classifying norms explained in his book aren't sufficient to accurately make the classification.

Because the medicine used for this constitution medicine has strong characteristics inclined toward one side in contrast to the traditional Chinese medicine, using it on a misclassified patient could bring side effects.  Therefore the scientific evolution was hindered by the reluctance to use it in cases of doubt about the constitution classification.

Lately, though, this constitution medicine is going through some drastic changes.  Because of its amazing and outstanding curative efficacy, it is under constant study by minority scientists and is being completed little by little, giving it its chance to evolve.

In 1965 the outstanding Korean doctor Kwon Dowon published his dissertation, in which he found that the four constitutions discovered by Lee Jema can be divided into eight sub-constitutions, and launched a new kind of acupuncture treatment in addition to the medicine-based treatments presented by Lee Jema.

His constitution acupuncture attracted much attention due to its great and rapid efficacy, and gave people reason to newly acknowledge the theory of constitution medicine on which is based the theory of constitution acupuncture.

The Constitution Medicine of Lee Jema
According to Lee Jema, each person is born with one of the four constitutions. The criteria for classifying constitutions did not depend on facial traits, skin color or bodily form, but on the differences from birth in the functioning of the organs. This was an amazing opinion, because he asserted it in a time when there weren't any modern diagnostic devices such as X-ray machines and Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) which could directly measure the size and function of the organs. It isn't possible to know exactly how he based his assertion that each person is born with different organ structures.

He was a doctor of Oriental medicine who studied Chinese medicine, so undoubtedly he was influenced by many classical books of Chinese medicine such as Huangdi Neijing and Sahnghanlun, and others. But classifying human constitutions by the differences in the natural born organ structures is his unique contribution, not found in any of the Chinese classical literature.

One could guess that he was able through clairvoyance to uncover the secrets of organ structures hidden in human bodies, or that he discovered through clinical research that organs tend to function differently in different people. Maybe based on such research he came up with his constitution theory.

The theoretical background of his unique assertion is indeed the topic of study for later scientists, and there are many dissertations published in this field.

However, the most important question is, does his assertion that people have from birth different organ structures stand up to objective fact?  This is the core question for anyone who tries to study the unique Korean constitution medicine.

In the beginning, I, too, had many doubts, and gave it much thought.  I spent much time striving to find an unequivocal answer to this question, is this core theory of constitution medicine, that people are born with different organ structures, just a device to come up with a prescription, or is it really supported by objective fact?  
An intellectual can't easily accept or study a new theory without this kind of serious thought.  I eventually came to accept this constitution theory of Lee Jema as truth, studying the theory and experiencing myself clinical healing in accordance with it, in spite of the fact that it is not yet perfectly proven by modern scientific methods.
This is the conviction that comes from my own clinical experience.

How closely a theory conforms to objective fact depends on the degree to which the expected result comes from treatment done according to the theory.
Even if a theory in itself is perfectly elegant, it should be discarded if it doesn't lead to the expected result in the real world. Any branch of science, especially medicine, should be judged not by the elegance of its theory, but by the results of its healing in the real world.

I have no doubt that this constitution medicine will soon be proven by modern scientific methods.  It was only about one hundred years ago that it became known that people are born with different types of blood. The discovery of blood types lead to miraculous changes in medical history.

I believe that if the fact that people are born with different constitutions is proven by scientific methods, and if the day comes when constitutions, like blood types, can be classified by simple and objective means, the world medical history will once again go through revolutionary changes.

I am hoping that the recent high-profile research into gene mapping will provide a key to scientifically unlock the mystery of constitution medicine.  According to research by constitution medical doctors, constitutions are by birth and hereditary.  If there is a clear relationship between genes and the hereditary constitutions, the study of genes can lead to establishing the existence of constitutions.

An American institute authoritative in gene research found that a person's obesity is not necessarily related to how much one eats, that there clearly is a specific constitution of those who tend to get fat no matter how little they eat.  The same penicillin efficiently kills bacteria in one person, but in another causes fatal side effects.  It seems evident, that gene research will prove that there exists also a constitution that is hypersensitive to penicillin.

Up till now, medicines are prescribed uniformly without considering the genetically specific character or the race or individual, but in the future there will be medicine adjusted to the individual person.

Thanks to the completion of the gene project, today's Western medicine, which equally applies the same medicine to everyone with the same symptoms, will soon change its medical paradigm to treatment which puts importance on the genetically specific character of the individual.  

Western medicine, which treats only the ill body part as the object of treatment, will become much more attentive of the relationship between the ill part and the whole body. This is the treatment paradigm of Oriental medicine, especially Korean constitution medicine.

 

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