It is also known as chronic erosive gastritis or pox-like gastritis. Gastroscopically, it is characterized by warty elevations, which can also become irregular or long, similar in color to the surrounding mucosa, and the lesions are mostly located at the gastric sinus. The treatment of warty gastritis is similar to that of common chronic gastritis, mainly acid suppression, protection of gastric mucosa and strengthening of gastric motility. Since most patients have excessive gastric acid and significant epigastric pain and discomfort, acid suppression therapy is particularly important, usually using H2 receptor antagonists or proton pump inhibitors, which can relieve clinical symptoms. Patients can be treated to make immature lesions disappear or to heal the erosions of mature lesions, but the bulging tissue often persists. The natural course of the disease varies in patients, and in some patients symptoms may disappear within a few months, so that warty gastritis can be clinically cured with aggressive treatment, but some patients have recurrent disease.