Patients with foot and neck gout can take oral colchicine for rapid pain relief and anti-inflammation to relieve the patient’s pain. If the patient cannot tolerate colchicine and has reactions such as abdominal pain and diarrhea after taking it, it can be replaced with a non-steroidal pain medication, such as diclofenac sodium, for treatment. When the patient’s pain is relieved, continuous uric acid-lowering medication is also required during the interval when the joint is pain-free in order to avoid a reoccurrence of gout foot pain. There are two main categories of uric acid-lowering drugs commonly used in clinical practice, one is allopurinol and febuxostat, which inhibit uric acid production, and the other is benzbromarone, a drug that promotes uric acid excretion, and one of these drugs can be chosen according to the patient’s condition for continuous uric acid-lowering drug therapy.