If an anterior wall fibroid is found, there is no need to be nervous. In cases where a single fibroid is larger than five centimeters, surgery is clinically indicated. If there is a need for fertility, surgery can be performed to remove the fibroids. If you do not have a child, you can have a subtotal hysterectomy or a total hysterectomy. When the fibroids are less than five centimeters and there are no clinical symptoms, you can review them regularly and have an ultrasound examination every six months, mainly to understand the growth rate of fibroids and whether they have degenerated, and to rule out the possibility of malignant changes. Although fibroids are one of the benign tumors in gynecology, there are still 0.3%-1.39% of patients with malignant changes, so it is recommended to have three blood tests for gynecological tumors every year in order to exclude the possibility of malignant changes.