Human Understanding is Expected of the Physician: Proposing a Model of Disease Development

In Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine, human understanding is emphasized as one of three necessary characteristics that a physician must have. Inflammation, which is caused by inflammatory inducers (inf-ids), is a fundamental feature of disease at the cellular and molecular levels. Inflammat...

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Published inThe Korean journal of medicine Vol. 99; no. 2; pp. 84 - 95
Main Authors Park, Sang-Heum, Park, Samel, Kim, Jin Young, Lee, Hyeon Ah, Lee, Sang Mi, Lee, Tae Hoon, Bae, Sang Byung, Chang, Sung Hae, Jang, Si Hyong, Chun, Sung Wan, Moon, Jong Ho
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 대한내과학회 01.04.2024
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ISSN1738-9364
2289-0769
DOI10.3904/kjm.2024.99.2.84

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Summary:In Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine, human understanding is emphasized as one of three necessary characteristics that a physician must have. Inflammation, which is caused by inflammatory inducers (inf-ids), is a fundamental feature of disease at the cellular and molecular levels. Inflammation protects the body, but excessive or prolonged inflammation can be damaging and can cause disease. Humans are repeatedly exposed to external and internal environmental factors that generate inf-ids throughout their lives. External environmental factors include microbial and non-microbial inf-ids, as well as stressors that inevitably arise during social interactions. Internal environmental factors include the adaptive physiological response that is present from birth. Inf-ids may also be produced by the four-step habit loop, which consists of a cue (e.g., stressor), emotions, routine act (adaptive response), and a reward. Immune cells in the circulatory system and in tissues may have positive and negative effects in inflammatory responses. However, low-grade inflammation may be difficult to detect. We propose a model of disease development that integrates external and internal environmental factors from the perspective of human understanding.
ISSN:1738-9364
2289-0769
DOI:10.3904/kjm.2024.99.2.84