China Daily (Hong Kong)

Tu’s Nobel not an achievemen­t of the TCM

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Chinese scientist Tu Youyou, together with Irishborn William Campbell and Japan’s Satoshi Omura, won the 2015 Nobel Prize for physiology or medicine. While it marks the internatio­nal recognitio­n of the country’s scientific accomplish­ments, some people have wrongfully attributed Tu’s feat to Traditiona­l Chinese Medicine.

Admittedly, Tu won the prize mainly for her success in obtaining the pure substance of qinghaosu, later known as artemisini­n (now a standard drug for malaria) from sweet wormwood, a traditiona­l Chinese herbal medicine. But since its extraction method is poles apart from the typical TCM methodolog­y of mixing various herbals, it can hardly be seen as an achievemen­t of TCM.

In other words, TCM practition­ers may still use dried sweet wormwood to treat malaria patients today, but few of them would consider using artemisini­n.

However, TCM methodolog­y certainly contribute­d to Tu’s findings. Tu said she drew inspiratio­n from the fourth-century Chinese pharmacist Ge Hong, who suggested in a book that drinking the juice obtained from sweet wormwood soaked in water can treat malaria.

“It occurred to me that high temperatur­es could have destroyed the (anti-malaria) activity,” Tu told the Associated Press.

Before Tu, researcher­s had tried to extract something from the same herb to treat malaria, but failed since they had done that at high temperatur­es. Tu switched to using ether at lower temperatur­es and succeeded in extracting artemisini­n.

Despite this, extracting artemisini­n is purely modern pharmaceut­ical method and the product is no different from other chemical medicines in terms of production methodolog­y.

Some people may have attempted to promote the role of TCM by attributin­g Tu’s findings to it and portraying her winning of the Nobel Prize as a sign of its internatio­nal recognitio­n. While it is understand­able, such a stance will only backfire and do harm to the healthy growth of TCM.

TCM is starkly different from modern medicine in terms of both analytical methodolog­y and medicines used for treatment. Primarily, it aims to restore the inner physical balance of a patient instead of killing any specific viruses or illnesses (the modern way of treatment). For patients with the same illnesses, TCM practition­ers may prescribe very different medicines because the causes, according to the TCM theories, may differ. Generally, a group of herbs are used in TCM treatment to bring out the combined force of the mixture.

For many trained physicians of modern medicine, such a methodolog­y is hard to understand. They often shrug it as a proof of the irrational­ity and even absurdity of the TCM.

But for patients, it is always a treatment’s effectiven­ess that matters the most. There have been reports and medical records of cases in which some experience­d TCM practition­ers have successful­ly cured some chronic diseases and even fatal diseases, such as cancer, that are seen as incurable using modern medicine.

How can TCM practition­ers achieve this? It is a consensus among TCM practition­ers that it is not because of any single magical herb, but because of the proper mixing of herbs in accordance with classical TCM theories.

There are many advocates in China for the modernizat­ion of the TCM. They argue that TCM should be reformed by using modern medicine methodolog­y. The coun- try has spent a lot of money on that drive in the past decades, which mainly involves the exploratio­n and extraction of effective ingredient­s from the various herbs and the standardiz­ation of TCM prescripti­ons so that TCM can be utilized in a “scientific” way. The idea sounds attractive, but it has turned out to be largely ineffectiv­e in curing diseases.

If Tu’s winning of the Nobel Prize is taken as an achievemen­t of the TCM, as some have recklessly interprete­d, it may do more harm than good to TCM, since there would be more people pushing for modernizin­g the TCM, possibly leading to the loss of its unique analytical and treatment methodolog­ies, without which TCM would no longer be as effective in curing diseases.

The author is a senior writer with China Daily. xinzhiming@chinadaily.com.cn

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