It is often seen clinically that after some patients have been removed from the stressful working environment and rested in bed for a few days, the ulcer disease quickly improves, although the medication is the same as in the outpatient clinic, indicating that rest and environmental factors have a great influence on the healing of ulcers. Gastric ulcer itself can be said to be a benign pathological process, and after strict medical treatment, the majority of patients can be cured, but if it cannot be treated in a timely, systematic and regular manner, it is likely to become a persistent ulcer or cause complications of ulcer, such as bleeding, perforation, pyloric obstruction, etc. According to clinical observation and data statistics, most patients can be cured of ulcer within 4-8 weeks after medical treatment Therefore, it is appropriate to arrange the treatment for 4-8 weeks. Gastroscopy review or barium meal X-ray should be performed at 4-6 weeks of treatment to determine the efficacy, and if the ulcer does not improve, the treatment plan should be modified in time. Of course, in addition to medication, bed rest, diet adjustment, smoking and alcohol cessation should also be included in this period as some adjuvant treatment. The drugs commonly used in clinical practice are H2 receptor antagonists, such as metformin, 200 mg half an hour before each meal, and 400 mg before bedtime; ranitidine 150 mg, once every 12 hours; famotidine 20 mg, twice a day; the above three drugs are generally taken for 4-6 weeks in a row. Loxac, 20 mg once a day, is usually reviewed by gastroscopy after 2 weeks of taking the drug. In addition, proglumide and Tegramet are available. However, the specific choice of that drug depends on the person and the local medical conditions, and the affordability of the patient should also be considered.