Meniere’s disease is an otogenic disease characterized by lymphatic effusion in the inner ear, also known as membranous vagus effusion, which develops in young and middle-aged people between 20 and 60 years old (75%), with no gender difference, mostly involving one inner ear, but in a few patients both ears are involved one after another. The clinical manifestation is episodic vertigo, with recurrent attacks, a sense of rotation, objects around the eyes open, and a sense of rotation with the eyes closed, with certain directionality. Most of the patients have tinnitus and deafness before the vertigo attack, and hearing loss occurs only after a few days of tinnitus; some of the tinnitus and deafness appear during the attack, and hearing is restored after the attack stops, but with the increase of the number of attacks, deafness gradually worsens and leads to total deafness, and deafness is sensorineural. Tinnitus can be persistent, aggravated during vertigo attacks and reduced during intervals. The attacks are accompanied by nausea, vomiting, pallor and other symptoms. There should be horizontal or horizontal rotational nystagmus of varying intensity during the attack. The affected ear is stuffy, blocked or pressed, and the head feels heavy. It is not difficult to determine the diagnosis based on episodes of tinnitus, deafness, deafness and vertigo, disappearance of symptoms in the interval, hearing threshold measurement of sensorineural deafness or mixed deafness, positive glycerol test, and reduced or lost vestibular function. Health care Treatment of acute attack: The aim of pharmacological treatment is to reduce vertigo, nausea, vomiting and accompanying anxiety and tension symptoms, and to suppress vestibular sensitivity. Sedatives, tranquilizers, antiemetics or anticholinergics are given, such as intramuscular injections of the following drugs: scopolamine, atropine, 654-II injection. Oral drugs such as phenobarbital, chlorpromazine, 3 times a day may be used for milder seizures. Treatment of intermittent periods: Those with fewer seizures and asymptomatic intervals can be treated without any treatment. Those with frequent seizures can continue to take oral medications during the seizure period, while the calcium channel blocker flunarizine can be added orally. It is recommended to limit the salt intake to 0.8~1.0g per day. If the seizures are frequent, the vertigo is serious and affects the work and life, the hearing loss is at least 30dB, and the medication is not effective, surgery can be performed to destroy the vestibular part of the affected vestibule so that the vestibular impulses cannot be transmitted to the center. Surgical methods: conservative method: endolymphatic bundle shunt, decompression and dissection; semi-destructive method: vestibular nerve dissection to prevent further attacks of vertigo without affecting the remaining hearing, for those who have lesions on both sides or on one side and wish to preserve their hearing. Destructive method: vagotomy and cochlear vestibulotomy, which provides lasting relief of vertigo symptoms and is used for unilateral lesions because it causes deafness on the operated side. Chinese medicine treatment: Acupuncture treatment can relieve symptoms, Fengchi and Hegu can reduce vertigo, Neiguan can stop vomiting, and cataract and auditory gong are added for tinnitus.