Phytodystrophy is known in medicine as somatic form autonomic disorder, also called phytodysfunction, and can be treated by choosing neurology in regular hospitals, or psychosomatic medicine or psychiatry if available. Cardiac neurosis, gastric neurosis, cardiac diarrhea, hyperventilation, and cardiac dysuria are common in phytokinetic disorders, so patients often do not directly choose neurology for consultation, and different clinical manifestations make patients choose different clinical departments for consultation. Patients with cardiac neurosis, whose clinical symptoms are mainly paroxysmal chest pain or colic, often choose cardiology; patients with gastric neurosis, such as slow digestion, loss of appetite, abdominal distension, diarrhea or constipation, and difficulty in swallowing, often choose gastroenterology, but often the results of their clinical tests do not show any obvious abnormalities. Patients with phytodystrophy are often deeply distressed and repeatedly consult doctors and have repeated examinations, but the results of all examinations are normal, while patients are often convinced that the appearance of certain symptoms must be due to problems in one of their organs or systems. Therefore, the choice of psychosomatic medicine or psychiatry can help in the treatment. Finally, patients with phytodystrophy need to choose a regular hospital for consultation, exclude organic diseases, and choose neurology or psychosomatic medicine or psychiatry for treatment after diagnosis by a specialist.