Pancreatitis can be treated and recovered, and most of the pancreatitis is relatively mild and belongs to the category of mild pancreatitis, sometimes called edematous pancreatitis. There is swelling and exudation around the pancreas, but there is no pancreatic necrosis. Patients are usually treated symptomatically after hospitalization and usually recover from the disease, and can be treated symptomatically with drugs such as fasting, gastrointestinal decompression, prophylactic antibiotics, fluid replacement, and inhibition of pancreatic enzyme secretion. Usually in about 1 week the patient recovers, abdominal pain is relieved, and the indicators are generally normalized on review, such as blood amylase, urinary amylase, and lipase are normalized, the patient can be discharged from the hospital, which means that the treatment has recovered. However, it is necessary to find out the cause of pancreatitis, whether it is caused by stones in the bile duct, gallbladder stones, alcohol consumption or high blood lipids, and to remove the cause so as to further prevent the recurrence of pancreatitis.