Treatment of high triglycerides mainly includes lifestyle interventions and pharmacotherapy, of which the former is the cornerstone of treatment, including regular exercise, limiting monosaccharide intake, controlling body weight, replacing saturated fatty acids with unsaturated fatty acids as much as possible, and limiting alcohol consumption. If effective lifestyle interventions still fail to control triglycerides to normal levels, medication may be considered. Be sure to fully communicate with your doctor before and during medication, and take or adjust medication under medical advice. 1, statins: the most commonly used lipid-regulating drugs, can inhibit cholesterol synthesis, accelerate LDL clearance, reduce plasma LDL cholesterol and triglycerides. It can reduce the mortality rate of patients with coronary heart disease and play an important role in the secondary prevention of coronary heart disease. 2, fibrate drugs: can reduce plasma triglyceride levels and increase HDL levels. Commonly used drugs include fenofibrate tablets, micronized fenofibrate, gemfibrozil, benzofibrate, etc. 3, niacin drugs: also known as vitamin B3, is an essential vitamin. At high doses, niacin has the effect of lowering total cholesterol, triglycerides and raising high-density lipoprotein. There are ordinary and slow-release 2 kinds of dosage forms, to slow-release dosage forms are more commonly used. 4, high-purity fish oil preparations: the main component of fish oil, namely ω-3 fatty acids, is mainly used to treat hypertriglyceridemia, with fewer adverse effects.