The specific recovery time for gonorrhea treated with levofloxacin depends on the duration of gonorrhea (acute or chronic), whether the patient is resistant to levofloxacin-based drugs, and whether other infections are co-infected. For acute gonorrhea that does not develop drug resistance during treatment and is not co-infected with other infections, the symptoms can disappear within 1 week at the earliest after administration of the drug, excluding factors such as individual physical condition. Gonorrhea is caused by Neisseria gonorrhoeae infection, and the inflammatory changes in the genital tract usually appear after an incubation period of 3-5 days after infection. After a history of unclean sexual contact and the appearance of gonorrhea symptoms, early diagnosis and treatment are needed, mostly with ceftriaxone sodium or daikonimycin, but also with levofloxacin, azithromycin, doxycycline, minocycline and other drugs, while keeping the genital tract clean. If drug resistance does not develop during treatment, symptoms can be relieved about 1 week after treatment. If the patient’s condition is delayed for various reasons, or if drug resistance develops during treatment, the time for symptoms to disappear will be extended accordingly. The disappearance of symptoms and signs of gonorrhea does not mean that gonorrhea has been cured. A negative gonococcal re-test is required 4-7 days after treatment to determine the cure.