With the continuous improvement of medical level, medical surgery is not only limited to removing the disease for patients, but also how to reduce the pain, injury and danger caused by surgery has become a higher pursuit of humanized medical development nowadays. Traditional open surgery is not only traumatic, bleeding, slow recovery, and there are certain safety risks, but minimally invasive surgery with its advantages of less trauma, less interference, quick recovery, high safety, and short hospitalization time has basically realized the patient’s desire to “cure a big disease without opening or moving a small knife”, which is favored by the majority of patients. Ms. Zhang, who lives in Nantong, once had an innocent and lively son, but unfortunately her son was taken away by a merciless disease when he was three years old, and all the happiness in Ms. Zhang’s life was taken away at the same time. Even more unfortunately, she was eager to become a mother again, but in recent years she has been pregnant several times, but the result was an unexpected miscarriage! After a checkup at a local hospital, Ms. Zhang was found to have multiple uterine fibroids. The largest one is at the bottom of the uterus and has a diameter of 10cm, which is the “culprit” for her habitual miscarriage. Because the base of the uterus is rich in blood vessels and nerves, the surgery to remove the fibroids alone was extremely dangerous, and the doctor recommended that she have her entire uterus removed. However, for Ms. Zhang, who still wanted to have children, losing her uterus would mean losing her right to be a mother forever. She immediately rejected the doctor’s treatment plan and left in dismay. In early July 2015, Ms. Zhang was referred to me by a friend. After listening to her self-reported condition, I conducted a comprehensive and detailed examination for her, and the results were the same as before. I performed a minimally invasive laparoscopic myoma removal surgery for Ms. Zhang. The operation was very successful, and all the fibroids were removed from Ms. Zhang’s uterus. What is more rare is that the operation not only did not cause any damage to Ms. Zhang’s uterus, but also preserved her fertility. In December 2015, Ms. Zhang finally got pregnant as she wished, and she rushed to Nantong Sixth Hospital to report her joy at the first time when she was about to become a mother again. Minimally invasive gynecological surgery has been recognized by doctors and patients for its small trauma, quick recovery, short hospitalization time and high surgical safety. At present, gynecological diseases including uterine fibroids, ovarian cysts, polycystic ovary syndrome, endometriosis, ectopic pregnancy and unwanted pregnancy can be treated by various minimally invasive surgeries according to the situation.