Interventional treatment of abdominal hemorrhage: The clinical manifestations of abdominal cavity organ hemorrhage are vomiting blood, black stool, and in severe cases, dangerous conditions such as shock, or even life-threatening. The causes of bleeding are commonly peptic ulcers, diverticula, inflammation, postoperative abdominal surgery and trauma resulting in rupture of abdominal organs; occasionally, vascular malformations and medically induced injuries are seen. The development of digital subtraction angiography (DSA) has made great progress in the diagnosis of abdominal organ hemorrhage, and there is evidence that hemorrhage of 0.5 ml/sec can show clear contrast extravasation on DSA, in addition to spasm, thinning of local arteries, vascular malformation, and the presence of blood-rich tumors are also potential manifestations of local vascular hemorrhage. The timely embolization of the bleeding artery is also the absolute advantage of interventional treatment, which can achieve the effect of “four birds and a thousand pounds”. The following is a rare case of abdominal hemorrhage cured by interventional treatment. The patient, a 66-year-old female, was admitted to the hospital with “severe hemorrhagic necrotizing pancreatitis” due to sudden onset of severe abdominal pain, and laboratory tests after admission showed no significant increase in blood amylase but a significant decrease in hematocrit. The abdominal enhancement CT showed a tendency to simple abdominal hemorrhage. The diagnosis was clear, and spring coil embolization of the upper and lower pancreaticoduodenal arteries was performed immediately. Figure 1, CT enhancement showed abdominal occupancy and obvious contrast ring exudation, which was considered as pseudoaneurysm formation. Figure 2: Contrast agent leakage was seen in the suprapancreaticoduodenal artery angiography, which was a sign of bleeding. Figure 3, Intraoperative embolization of the superior pancreaticoduodenal artery with a spring coil. Figure 4, the inferior pancreaticoduodenal artery angiogram shows more contrast leakage, which is consistent with the presence of circumferential contrast in the enhanced CT image. Figure 5, Embolization of this artery with a significant decrease in contrast leakage and cessation of bleeding.