Meniere’s disease, now known as Meniere’s disease, is an inner ear disease with idiopathic membranous vagal effusion that presents with recurrent episodes of rotational vertigo, fluctuating sensorineural hearing loss, tinnitus, and/or a feeling of fullness in the ear. Treatment is divided into episodic treatment and intermittent treatment. The specific treatment methods are as follows: 1. The acute attack period is mainly aimed at relieving vertigo, nausea, vomiting and other symptoms. Vestibular nerve inhibitors such as diazepam, diphenhydramine and diphenhydramine are often used. Other drugs include anticholinergics (such as scopolamine and scopolamine), hormones, etc. 2. The intermittent period is mainly aimed at reducing the number of seizures to protect the function of the inner ear, with a gradual stepwise treatment program: (1) Lifestyle adjustment: including regular lifestyle, reducing mental stress, low-salt diet, and avoiding coffee, tea, and alcohol intake. (2) Pharmacological treatment: The application of betahistine and diuretics can improve inner ear microcirculation and reduce membrane vagus edema to control vertigo. (3) Glucocorticoid injection in the tympanic chamber: it can eliminate vagal edema and protect the hearing balance function at the same time. (4) Middle-ear pressure therapy: It can control vertigo symptoms in short or long term by low-pressure pulse therapy. (5) Gentamicin injection in the tympanic chamber: for patients whose hearing has been permanently damaged. (6) Surgery: If the vertigo attacks are frequent and severe, and the above conservative treatment is ineffective for a long time, and if the tinnitus and deafness are severe, surgery is required. To sum up, patients with Ménière’s disease who have mild symptoms can be treated conservatively with medication, and those who cannot be controlled by conservative treatment with recurrent attacks need surgery.