The treatment of high HGH must be considered in conjunction with clinical symptoms and whether or not the patient is pregnant. If the pregnancy is normal, no treatment is needed, and the physiological high is confirmed by combining the abdominal ultrasound and the number of days after menopause. Excluding normal pregnancy with high HGH, other causes of high HGH need to be treated with purging, ectopic pregnancy should be treated with surgery, and abnormalities such as hyperemesis gravidarum and teratoma need to be treated with laparoscopic surgery. High HGH can also be treated with anti-estrogen drugs. Menopausal women with high HGH must go to the hospital as soon as possible for further examination to rule out other diseases such as uterine fibroids. The amount of gonadotropin in women varies at different times of life and needs to be considered on an individual basis.