Diagnosis training

TCM pattern differentiation practice

Pattern differentiation is where Chinese Medicine study becomes clinical. Shen Study helps you practise recognising what is primary, what is secondary and what evidence actually supports your diagnosis.

Built as a study aid for Chinese Medicine students — use alongside lectures, supervision and primary texts.

What this page targets

Pattern differentiation is the diagnostic hinge of a TCM case: the same symptom can point in different directions depending on the whole presentation. This page is for practising that comparison step deliberately.

Use Shen Study to slow down the moment between recognising familiar signs and committing to a pattern, especially when two options look similar on the surface.

Skills you build

Separate main evidence from background noise

Distinguish the findings that carry diagnostic weight from details that may be constitution, context or secondary presentation.

Compare similar patterns side by side

Practise why one pattern fits better than another when both share symptoms like fatigue, heat signs, pain or digestive change.

Use tongue and pulse as supporting evidence

Link tongue and pulse findings to the pathomechanism instead of treating them as isolated memorised clues.

  • Mark evidence for excess, deficiency, heat, cold, interior and exterior tendencies.
  • Practise choosing the primary pattern before adding secondary patterns.
  • Write a short justification in your own words before reading feedback.
  • Turn confusing differentials into targeted flashcards or review notes.

How to use it

This page is best for students who can recognise pattern names but want sharper diagnostic discrimination.

Choose a case and underline the strongest pattern evidence.
Name one likely pattern and one plausible alternative.
Explain the single clue that would change your mind.
Use feedback to refine your pattern language for the next case.

Questions students ask

What is TCM pattern differentiation?

It is the process of organising signs and symptoms into a Chinese Medicine pattern so treatment can be directed coherently.

Is this the same as Western diagnosis?

No. Western diagnosis and Chinese Medicine pattern differentiation answer different clinical questions. Shen Study focuses on the Chinese Medicine reasoning process.

Can this help with exam preparation?

Yes, especially for case-based questions where you need to justify a diagnosis and explain why other options are less likely.

Train your next pattern decision

Use a case prompt to compare the evidence, choose a primary pattern and review the reasoning.

Practise pattern differentiation