Hepatic hemangioma is a relatively common benign tumor of the liver, most commonly known as cavernous hemangioma. Hepatic hemangiomas are mainly due to abnormal blood vessel development during embryonic development. Most of them grow slowly, but only a few of them grow suddenly, followed by symptoms such as discomfort in the liver area, loss of appetite, feeling of fullness after meals or belching, nausea and indigestion. Whether hepatic hemangioma needs to be treated or not depends mainly on the presence of clinical symptoms and its growth rate and size. At present, the best treatment for hepatic hemangioma is surgical debridement, which has the characteristics of less damage to normal liver, high safety, less bleeding and more complete treatment. For exophytic hemangioma growing in the left liver and the fifth and sixth segments of the right liver, it can be removed by laparoscopy. However, nowadays, some people believe that hepatic hemangioma should be treated as early as possible, and even advocate that those over 5 cm should receive non-surgical treatment such as sclerotherapy, microwave, radiation, laser, interventional embolization to prevent them from growing. In fact, this is a very wrong approach. First of all, not all hemangiomas keep growing, some may not grow for a long time or grow slowly, and some stop growing when they reach a certain level, especially for elderly patients over 60 years old, there is no need to treat them. Secondly, the non-surgical treatment methods mentioned above cannot completely remove liver hemangioma, and many people will still have recurrence after treatment, and there is also a risk of serious complications. Therefore, it is now generally accepted that asymptomatic liver hemangiomas of less than 10 cm do not require treatment and can be observed for a long time with ultrasound examinations every 6 months. If the above symptoms appear, surgery may be considered for hemangiomas that grow rapidly (1~2 cm/year) and are larger than 10 cm in young patients. Left hepatic hemangioma with early symptoms and easy exophytic growth can be treated by minimally invasive laparoscopic surgery with less surgical risk and slightly relaxed surgical indications. In addition, although hepatic hemangioma has little effect on liver function, patients should still try to eat a light diet, eat more vitamin-rich fruits and vegetables and magnesium-rich foods, avoid oily, thick, spicy and stimulating foods, and stop smoking and drinking.