When the topic of traditional Asian medicine was first mooted, we were sceptical. To a magazine based in Europe and steeped in the history of science, there is much about traditional Asian medical practice that seems mystical and pseudoscientific. Other than well known success stories — artemisinin for malaria, and arsenic trioxide for leukaemia — there seemed to be a lack of scientifically proven remedies.
Yet a bit of probing revealed what a complex story this is. Not only are big efforts underway to modernize traditional medicine in China and Japan, but Western medicine is adopting some aspects of the Eastern point of view too. In particular, modern medical practitioners are coming around to the idea that certain illnesses cannot be reduced to one isolatable, treatable cause. Rather, a fall from good health often involves many small, subtle effects that create a system-wide imbalance.
But do traditional medicines actually work? Their personalized nature makes randomized controlled trials — the gold standard for testing drugs — extremely difficult. Rarely are two formulations identical. However, as modern medicine becomes more personalized, using biological and genetic markers, it is inadvertently developing the tools to better test traditional medicines.
Although artemisinin and arsenic trioxide are the archetypal examples of successful modern medicines mined from traditional Asian medicine, they do not represent the ideal convergence of the two systems. There are unique aspects to traditional Asian medicine that could hold great promise if they are artfully investigated. The goal of science should be to rigorously test each claim and sort the medical wheat from the pseudoscientific chaff.
We acknowledge the financial support of Saishunkan Pharmaceutical Co., ltd and Kitasato University Oriental Medicine Research Center in producing this Outlook. As always, Nature takes full responsibility for all editorial content.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Grayson, M. Traditional Asian medicine. Nature 480, S81 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1038/480S81a
Published:
Issue date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/480S81a
This article is cited by
-
Structural analogues in herbal medicine ginseng hit a shared target to achieve cumulative bioactivity
Communications Biology (2021)
-
Differential annotation of converted metabolites (DAC-Met): Exploration of Maoto (Ma-huang-tang)-derived metabolites in plasma using high-resolution mass spectrometry
Metabolomics (2020)
-
KampoDB, database of predicted targets and functional annotations of natural medicines
Scientific Reports (2018)
-
Asian medicine: Many unique types
Nature (2012)
-
Asian medicine: Call for more safety data
Nature (2012)
J B
Although brief, this article suggests a more sophisticated approach to what traditional medicine can offer than much popular writing on the subject. Between partisan credulity, and dismissive skepticism comes this genuinely scientific approach. Asian medicine is a vast and very complex topic. Any attempt to reduce it to right or wrong is simplistic at best.
Charles Murtaugh
It's convenient that Nature should publish this supplement a few months before my subscription comes due for renewal. I'm now thinking to save my money instead for powdered rhinoceros horn or tiger penis.
Tobias Baskin
Based on the articles in this supplement, one could summarize efforts to unite practices of traditional Asian medicine with those of the West as: ?More drugs, less hocus-pocus?. But, what if the hocus-pocus were bioactive? That hocus-pocus can cure is obvious from the necessity of the double-blind trial: If the patient sniffs out which pill is the placebo, then it becomes mere sugar; but if the patient has no clue, then, to the contrary, the placebo becomes an effective medicine, curing about one-third of the time. What if traditional Asian medicine arises from taking the placebo effect and exploiting it brilliantly? I suggest that this possibility be considered by those spending millions to screen herbal infusions for active molecules, and that those seeking to unite Eastern and Western medicine need to pay attention to the role of the mind.
Neha Mittal
I am just wondering while talking about traditional Asian medicines, how one can leave the Ayurvedic Medicines that mainly belong to India.
Or the article should be Traditional Chinese Medicines??