Whether patients with visceral injury will heal themselves or not depends on the different parts of visceral injury, different severity, and the difference of patients’ own healing ability and other factors for objective analysis. If the patient suffers from trauma with contusions of the liver, spleen and other substantial organs, the patient’s own healing ability is stronger if the complete rupture of the envelope of the substantial organs is not caused at this time. In this case, through active bed rest, it is possible for the patient to completely repair the liver, spleen and other substantial organs, and surgery is not needed. Second, if the patient’s own repair ability is poor and the injury is accompanied by perforation of the digestive tract, this will cause gastric and intestinal fluids to seep into the abdominal cavity, causing serious abdominal infection in the patient. In this case, the patient’s perforated area is not able to heal on its own, and must undergo surgical repair combined with drug therapy to enable faster recovery of internal organ damage.