How long it takes to recover from endocrine disorders is uncertain, and is related to the cause and severity of the disease. Some patients may need a few months to recover, some may need a few years, and some may need lifelong medication to maintain endocrine stabilization. Endocrine disruption is not a specific disease, but a collective term for a series of symptoms, including overproduction of hormones, underproduction of hormones, and dysfunction of hormone action due to hormone receptor resistance. Such as polycystic ovary syndrome, Cushing’s syndrome, pheochromocytoma, hyperthyroidism, hypothyroidism, amenorrhea, menstrual disorders and so on belong to the existence of endocrine disorders. Endocrine disorders caused by prolonged emotional depression, excessive weight loss, excessive intake of exogenous hormones, etc. may return to normal sooner when the triggers are corrected. Endocrine disorders caused by pheochromocytoma, parathyroid adenoma, insulinoma, glucagon tumor, etc. may take several months for some patients to recover after surgical removal of the tumor. However, some patients, who may have irreversible hypothyroidism, will need lifelong thyroid hormone supplementation to maintain endocrine stability, which cannot be completely recovered. The presence of endocrine disorders should actively cooperate with the doctor’s treatment and remove the triggering factors in order to recover as early as possible.