Intracerebral cavernous hemangioma, also known as cavernous vascular malformation, is potentially curable, and the treatment options include conservative treatment, radiation therapy, and surgery. 1. Conservative treatment: For incidentally found asymptomatic cavernous angiomas, clinical observation and regular follow-up are available, and it is recommended to review the MRI every 6 months. conservative treatment is available for patients with no clinical symptoms, patients with epilepsy that can be controlled by medication, and patients who are old, frail, and with less severe symptoms. 2. Radiation therapy: Gamma Knife and Radio Wave Knife are common treatment modalities, but the efficacy of these modalities is still uncertain, and therefore they are not recommended. For those who have symptoms and cannot perform surgical resection, it can be considered, but at this time, it may not be able to cure. 3. Surgery: Surgery should be performed for patients with recurrent bleeding from the lesion, space-occupying effects and epilepsy. The purpose of surgery is to prevent bleeding, remove the occupying effect, and reduce seizures. If the surgery removes the malformation lesion completely, the patient can be cured. For patients diagnosed with cavernous hemangioma, they should go to the relevant departments of regular hospitals and be treated under the guidance of professional physicians to avoid delays.