
If two people share the same symptom, they must share the same problem, right?
After all, if both experience headaches, fatigue, or digestive discomfort, it seems logical that the diagnosis and treatment would be identical, doesn’t it?
In Chinese medicine, however, that isn’t how diagnosis works. A symptom is viewed as a signal rather than a conclusion. What matters most is the underlying pattern that has given rise to it.
Two people may describe the same complaint, yet the internal imbalance driving it can be very different. This is why acupuncture treatment is rarely standardised. It’s shaped around the individual rather than the label.
In conventional medicine, a diagnosis often starts with identifying a disease category.
In Chinese medicine, the process is different. The practitioner gathers detailed information about the whole person, including temperature preference, sleep, digestion, energy levels, and emotional tendencies.
These details help reveal the broader pattern in which the symptom sits. A headache, for example, might arise from tension and stagnation, from deficiency and lack of nourishment, or from an excess of internal heat. The symptom may look the same on the surface, but the internal context differs.
This shift in perspective is central to traditional diagnosis. The focus isn’t simply on what is happening, but on why it is happening in that particular person.
This process is described as pattern differentiation, or as it’s known traditionally, Bian Zheng. Rather than naming a disease, the practitioner identifies a constellation of signs that reflect a particular internal imbalance.
A pattern may involve stagnation of Qi, deficiency of Blood, retention of Dampness, or a combination of factors. Each pattern has its own logic and internal coherence. Once identified, treatment is directed at resolving that pattern rather than suppressing the symptom alone.
This approach explains why two patients with identical complaints might receive different acupuncture points, different treatment strategies, and even different lifestyle advice.
Another key concept is the distinction between root and branch. The branch refers to the presenting symptom. The root refers to the underlying imbalance that allows the symptom to arise.
If treatment addresses only the branch, relief may be temporary. If the root is identified and corrected, the symptom often settles more sustainably. In practice, both may be treated together, but the root always guides the long term strategy.
This layered thinking allows acupuncture to adapt as the patient changes. As the root strengthens or clears, the branch may no longer need direct attention.
One of the clearest examples of individualised diagnosis is the distinction between excess and deficiency patterns. An excess pattern reflects something accumulating or overacting within the body. A deficiency pattern reflects something lacking or insufficient.
Both may produce similar outward signs. For instance, fatigue can arise from Qi deficiency, where energy production is weak, or from Damp accumulation, where heaviness obstructs movement and clarity.
Treating these two patterns in the same way wouldn’t be appropriate. One requires a strengthening and supporting function. The other requires transforming and clearing what has accumulated.
Recognising this difference is essential to effective care.
The idea that the same symptom can arise from different causes lies at the heart of Chinese medicine. It reinforces the importance of careful listening, thorough assessment, and thoughtful pattern identification.
Acupuncture isn’t simply about targeting a symptom. It’s about recognising the internal landscape that has allowed that symptom to emerge. By addressing the pattern rather than the label, treatment can be tailored to the individual.
This is why two people with the same complaint may receive different diagnoses and different care. In Chinese medicine, true precision begins beneath the surface.
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