Study on the Relationship Between Physical Constitution and Diseases
Cross Sectional Study on Relationship Between Physical Constitution and Diseases in the Integrative Chinese Medicine and Western Medicine
Sponsor: National Taiwan University Hospital
This observational or N/A phase trial investigates Chronic Diseases and is currently ongoing. National Taiwan University Hospital leads this study, which shows 7 recorded versions since 2005 — indicating limited longitudinal coverage. The change history captured here reflects the iterative nature of clinical trial conduct.
Study Description(click to expand)It is difficult to predict the process or outcome of disease for individuals who expose to the same pathogen or condition. But according to the Traditional Chinese Medicine, physical constitution is an important factor for disease pattern, severity and response to the treatment. So it is paid more and more attention in Western Medicine to study the variation of individualized susceptibility to diseases. There have been some researches to investigate the relationship between physical constitution and disease pattern. Before further studies, we need to obtain more information about physical constitution and clinical characteristics. Therefore we design a comprehensive questionnaire to survey the types of physical constitution. And we plan to collect the data from health reports of candidates after their medical tests at Health Examination Center in National Taiwan University Hospital Yu-Lin Branch. We focus on the relationship between clinical characteristics (age, sex, symptoms, physical signs, laboratory results and image findings) of Western Medicine and the physical constitutional types of Chinese Medicine. Then we will try to find the correlation and significance between them. The study will conclude the constitutional characteristics in general population of Taiwan and the distribution tendency of physical constitution for the common diseases. The result can...
It is difficult to predict the process or outcome of disease for individuals who expose to the same pathogen or condition. But according to the Traditional Chinese Medicine, physical constitution is an important factor for disease pattern, severity and response to the treatment. So it is paid more and more attention in Western Medicine to study the variation of individualized susceptibility to diseases.
There have been some researches to investigate the relationship between physical constitution and disease pattern. Before further studies, we need to obtain more information about physical constitution and clinical characteristics. Therefore we design a comprehensive questionnaire to survey the types of physical constitution. And we plan to collect the data from health reports of candidates after their medical tests at Health Examination Center in National Taiwan University Hospital Yu-Lin Branch. We focus on the relationship between clinical characteristics (age, sex, symptoms, physical signs, laboratory results and image findings) of Western Medicine and the physical constitutional types of Chinese Medicine. Then we will try to find the correlation and significance between them.
The study will conclude the constitutional characteristics in general population of Taiwan and the distribution tendency of physical constitution for the common diseases. The result can serve as a stepping stone for integration of the Traditional Chinese Medicine and Western Medicine.
Status Flow
Change History
7 versions recorded-
Sep 2025 — Present [monthly]
Unknown
-
Sep 2024 — Sep 2025 [monthly]
Unknown
-
Jul 2024 — Sep 2024 [monthly]
Unknown
Status: Unknown Status → Unknown
-
Jan 2021 — Jul 2024 [monthly]
Unknown Status
-
Jun 2018 — Jan 2021 [monthly]
Unknown Status
▶ Show 2 earlier versions
-
Apr 2018 — Jun 2018 [monthly]
Unknown Status
Phase: NA → None
-
Jan 2017 — Apr 2018 [monthly]
Unknown Status NA
First recorded
May 2005
Trial started
Per CT.gov start date — pre-dates our first snapshot
Eligibility Summary
No eligibility information available.
Contact Information
- National Taiwan University Hospital
For direct contact, visit the study record on ClinicalTrials.gov .