Common symptoms of starvation gastritis include nausea, vomiting, acid reflux, belching, burping, and epigastric discomfort, which is often characterized by pain under the raphe or around the umbilicus, and may be accompanied by abdominal bloating, loss of appetite, and indigestion. Starvation gastropathy is a series of uncomfortable symptoms that the patient’s stomach shows when he or she is hungry. When starvation occurs, patients may experience nausea, vomiting, acid reflux, belching, burping, epigastric discomfort, and other symptoms such as stomach cramps. When hunger gastropathy is serious, it can make the gastric mucosa undergo erosion, or even ulceration, leading to patients with erosive gastritis, gastric ulcer and other diseases. Starvation gastropathy occurs because when the patient is hungry, there is no food in the stomach cavity, but the stomach acid is still secreted as usual, and the accumulation of a large amount of gastric acid will cause some damage to the gastric mucosa during fasting, thus showing a series of symptoms. In daily life, you should also pay attention to eat on time, avoid overeating and eating stimulating spicy food, you can eat more light, easy to digest food, such as congee, noodles, steamed bread and so on. If the above symptoms occur, it is recommended that standardized treatment be carried out as early as possible to reduce the adverse effects of the disease.