Gonorrhea infection is clinically preferred to be treated with cephalosporin or quinolone antibiotics. Commonly used drugs such as ceftriaxone, cefotaxime, cefixime, levofloxacin and moxifloxacin are all more commonly used. The clinical efficacy of gonorrhea treatment can be effectively observed in about one month, and patients with frequent, urgent and painful urination and purulent discharge from the urethra will often be significantly reduced or disappear. If the patient does not receive significant results in treatment, it is important to repeatedly check the bacterial culture and drug sensitivity tests, which may be due to the occurrence of drug resistance in gonorrhea or the combination of non-gonorrhea or other STD infections while the patient has gonorrhea. Because the symptoms of non-gonorrhea are clinically similar to those of gonorrhea, they are often combined.