블로그/칼럼 난치질환 클리닉
블로그 2026년 2월 14일

Even a Disease That Won't Heal Has an Order — Why I Look at the Mechanism Again

Dr. Dr. Heo Ji-young, Director of Kyunghee Meerae Korean Medicine Clinic, Gwangjin
의료 감수 Dr. Heo Ji-young Representative Director · KMD

If you have visited many hospitals and still haven't gotten better, the problem may not be the treatment but "what is being looked at."

The longer an illness has lasted, the less the answer shows itself when you only chase the symptoms currently on the surface. When I treat intractable conditions, instead of listing symptoms again, I first retrace the order in which the disease has progressed. In this piece I want to tell you why I take that approach, and what it changes in treatment.

Why does a "disease that won't heal" arise?

When a single symptom persists for a long time, the body stacks a second and a third problem on top of it. What began as a problem of circulation hardens over time into a change in the tissue, and on top of that come disruptions in digestion, sleep, and the autonomic nervous system. So a long-standing illness is often not a single cause but layers stacked one upon another.

In this state, if you treat only the symptom on the top layer, it improves for a while and then the problem from the lower layer rises up again. This is why people say, "It only gets a little better while I'm being treated."

So I look at the mechanism from the start

I studied the mechanisms of disease at the College of Korean Medicine at Kyung Hee University. With that background, the more intractable a condition is, the more I redraw the entire path the disease has traveled.

  • Where did regulation first break down?
  • What accumulated on top of that, in what order?
  • The symptom that is hardest at the very top layer now — where among these does it take root?

Even two people given the same diagnosis, if the paths they have walked differ, the starting point of treatment differs too. Only after drawing this map can you see which layer to start working on.

What I tell you honestly

I want to make one thing clear. I do not assert or promise a cure for intractable conditions. Instead, I honestly point out how far Korean medicine treatment can actually help in your current state. If I judge that help is difficult, I say so and first recommend the necessary tests or another type of care.

Neither vague expectation nor premature giving up — finding an evidence-based direction together. I believe that is the beginning I can offer in the face of a long-standing illness.

What is good to prepare before your visit

  • The test result sheets you have received so far (in chronological order if possible)
  • A list of the medications you are currently taking
  • A simple note on when and how the symptoms began and how they have changed

With these materials, I can draw the path the disease has traveled far more accurately. Do not stop the treatment you are already receiving; we will proceed in the direction of discussing together what can be added on top of it.

Have a symptom that's been on your mind?

Get a personalized one-on-one consultation.

Dr. Dr. Heo Ji-young, Director of Kyunghee Meerae Korean Medicine Clinic, Gwangjin

Dr. Heo Ji-young Representative Director · KMD

A graduate of the College of Korean Medicine at Kyung Hee University, with master's and doctoral degrees in pathology — the mechanisms of disease — from its graduate school. Later served as a research professor in the university's Herbology department, studying medicinal substances. Studying both disease and medicine from both sides is the foundation of this practice: explaining "why a given medicine works for a given illness" in the language of both pathology and pharmacology. Explains autonomic, chronic, and intractable conditions — and structural problems of the body — in the language of modern science, and proposes treatment matched to the cause. Has taught prescribing and clinical practice to Korean medicine doctors for over ten years, and is a co-author of "Korean Medicine, Explained by Korean Medicine Doctors," selected for the 2018 Sejong Books list (general category).

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