In order to improve the efficiency of data transmission and save communication resources, the problems of double event-triggered control are investigated for a class of high-order nonlinear random systems. Under more general system conditions, in addition to overcoming the difficulty of recursive design caused by signal discontinuity, the effects of high-order nonlinearity and random disturbances also need to be addressed. Based on the adding power integral technique, a practical finite-time stable result is established for the nonlinear random systems under a double event-triggered mechanism (ETM) and proved that there is no Zeno phenomenon. Compared with the existing results, the update frequency of the signals is effectively reduced, and the upper bound of the stable error is independent of trigger parameters, thus can be made sufficiently small by tuning design parameters. Furthermore, the result is expanded to finite-time stabilization, state variables converge to the origin in a finite time. Finally, numerical simulations verify the effectiveness of the proposed algorithm.