With the continuous progress of medical technology, the examination instruments are becoming more and more sophisticated, which makes many diseases can be detected early and treated early. Liver cysts are one of the very common clinical diseases, what clinical symptoms do patients with liver cysts have, let’s learn together. Liver cysts can be divided into single liver cysts and multiple liver cysts of which multiple liver cysts also become multi-cystic liver, larger multi-cysts can often cause significant pressure on the volume of the liver, causing a series of serious complications. Clinically, for smaller solitary liver cysts, patients often have no obvious clinical symptoms because the liver cysts do not cause compression of the surrounding organs and the cysts are almost always benign lesions. Most patients have small solitary liver cysts discovered during routine liver physical examinations or examinations for other diseases. Such asymptomatic solitary liver cysts are clinically recommended to be closely observed by the patient and do not require special management. If a progressive increase in the size of the liver cyst is detected during close observation or if the patient develops significant symptoms of discomfort, further treatment may be considered. A large cystic liver can cause intestinal compression, which can lead to nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, abdominal distension and other indigestion after eating. Once the cysts compress the bile ducts, they can cause obstruction of bile excretion, resulting in intrahepatic biliary stasis, and patients can develop obstructive jaundice such as yellowing of the skin and sclera and deep yellow urine. The compression of liver cells caused by polycystic liver can cause liver injury. Patients develop a series of clinical symptoms such as hypoproteinemia, hepatic insufficiency, loss of appetite, and coagulation dysfunction.