The treatment of gout is divided into two parts: acute, intermittent and remission treatment, which requires the use of a variety of different types of drugs. In the acute phase of gout, the main clinical manifestation is redness, swelling and pain in the joints, and rapid relief of swelling and pain is the main treatment objective. Currently, it is recommended that anti-inflammatory and analgesic treatment should be carried out as early as possible (usually within 24 hours), and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory and analgesic drugs, colchicine and glucocorticoids are commonly used. These drugs are fast-acting and effective, and most patients’ joint symptoms can be significantly reduced or even completely disappeared within a short period of time after taking them, and some patients think that these drugs are the “special medicine” for gout. However, the acute treatment is only part of the gout treatment, but the intermittent and remission uric acid treatment is the key to reduce the frequency of recurrent acute gout attacks, prevent the formation of uric acid stones and reduce organ damage. Patients with intermittent and remission gout usually have no obvious symptoms of joint redness, swelling, heat and pain, or even no discomfort, which leads most patients to take it lightly, thinking that gout has been “cured”, and thus do not take uric acid-lowering drugs regularly, which may lead to recurrent attacks of acute gout and uric acid stone formation over time, causing This can lead to recurrent attacks of acute gout and the formation of uric acid stones, resulting in organ damage. If you are in intermittent or remission, uric acid-lowering treatment is the key, and you need to use uric acid inhibitors or uric acid excretors. For patients with pre-existing gout stones or renal complications, treatment is also required depending on the extent of the disease. Therefore, the use of drugs for ventilation varies at different stages and must be regulated systematically under the guidance of a rheumatologist. Remember that the improvement of joint symptoms is not the same as the “cure” of gout, and systematic and standardized uric acid reduction is the key to treatment.