One of the biggest questions patients ask is this:
Why does the same treatment help one person — but seem to make another person worse?
The Constitutional Explanation
That question sits at the center of Eight Constitution Medicine. According to this framework, even common substances like dextrose may affect different constitutions differently — because constitutional organ patterns are not the same.
The framework specifically highlights contrasts between types like Hepatonia and Pulmotonia, where the same input may be supportive for one and potentially burdensome for the other.
Why This Matters for Patients
Many people feel frustrated because their body does not react “normally.” A supplement, food, IV, injection, or medication may seem helpful for others but not for them.
This article gives language to that frustration and introduces the core constitutional message: different bodies may require different support.
According to Eight Constitution Medicine, one-size-fits-all thinking may overlook the very thing that matters most: the individual.
The stronger framing for this concept is not “alternative cure.” It is individualized constitutional response — understanding why pulse diagnosis matters before making broad assumptions about treatment.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why would the same supplement help one person and not another?
According to Eight Constitution Medicine, each body type has different organ strengths and weaknesses. A substance that supports a weak organ in one type may overburden a strong organ in another.
How does pulse diagnosis help with treatment decisions?
Pulse diagnosis identifies your constitutional pattern first, so that treatment, food, and supplement guidance can be personalized rather than generic.
