If it is the early stage of alcoholic cirrhosis, it is possible to reverse or completely solve the problem by abstaining from alcohol and nutritional support, and also with medication appropriately, but it is not possible to cure the patients in the middle and late stages. Cirrhosis is the progression of chronic liver diseases such as chronic hepatitis to a pathological stage characterized by chronic inflammation of the liver, diffuse fibrosis, pseudofollicularity, regenerative nodules and intrahepatic vascular proliferation, with no obvious symptoms in the compensatory phase and portal hypertension and hepatic hypoplasia as the clinical features of the compensatory phase, and patients often die due to the complication of multiorgan failure such as esophagogastric fundal variceal hemorrhage, hepatic encephalopathy, infections, hepatorenal syndrome and portal vein thrombosis. Chronic failure and death. Alcohol cessation can only slow down the progression of cirrhosis, not cure cirrhosis. Currently, for patients in the compensated stage of cirrhosis, the treatment is aimed at delaying the loss of liver function, preventing hepatocellular carcinoma, and striving to reverse the lesions; for patients in the decompensated stage, the goal is to improve liver function, treat complications, and delay or reduce the need for liver transplantation. Cirrhosis patients are advised to seek timely medical treatment for a clear diagnosis and targeted treatment under the guidance of a doctor.