• Hell J Nucl Med · Jan 2014

    Editorial

    The timeless influence of Hippocratic ideals on diet, salicytates and personalized medicine.

    • Tom C Karagiannis.
    • Epigenomic Medicine, BakerIDI Heart and Diabetes Institute, Melbourne, 3004, Vic, Australia 75 Commercial Road, Melbourne. Department of Pathology, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, 3052, Vic, Australia. tom.karagiannis@bakeridi.edu.au.
    • Hell J Nucl Med. 2014 Jan 1; 17 (1): 2-6.

    AbstractAt a time when superstition and deities were thought to be responsible for health and disease, Hippocrates of Kos emerged as a rational thinker assigning disease to natural causes. His insights, which principally arose from what may be considered almost compulsive examination and comparison, formed the basis of Hippocratic Medicine. There are still unresolved questions regarding the authenticity of the approximately 70 works shaping the Hippocratic Corpus. Assigning authorship precisely presents difficulties and given that the various treatises in the collection appear to span a period of between 100 and 300 years, it is clear that they may not be ascribed to a single author. Ancient commentaries, including translation and annotation by the Hellenic physician Galen and more recently by Emile Littré have helped preserve and structure our knowledge of Hippocratic ideals. Further, a large school of contemporary scholars are constantly refining our understanding. Despite the controversies and uncertainties, the underlying themes of Hippocrates' influence on medicine which involve meticulous observation, comparison, prognosis and prediction are evident. Importantly, the Hippocratic Oath remains a masterpiece of medical morals and ethics, analogous forms of which are still used today. Indeed, the Hippocratic Corpus teaches timeless concepts which do not only relate to medical thought and methodology but also to the more gentle aspects of the art. In this essay Hippocratic observations are considered in relation to three important matters preoccupying modern medicine: a) nutrition, b) drug development and c) personalized medicine.

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