Yesterday, there was a patient from Changping who found a 3cm hemangioma in her liver during a local examination. After she went there, a “doctor” (in fact, a fraud who doesn’t deserve to be called a doctor) told her that she could take his medicine for one course of treatment per month, and that one course of treatment would cost 5,000 yuan and three courses would cure her. She didn’t buy the medicine because she didn’t have enough money with her, and she came to our hospital to see my clinic by the way. The ultrasound confirmed that it was indeed a hemangioma of the liver. I said she was really lucky, if she had brought enough money, it would have been like giving away a scammer for nothing, so please be careful! In fact, liver hemangiomas are a very common phenomenon, with a high percentage of small liver hemangiomas appearing in people over the age of 30. The essence of hemangioma is a mass of blood vessels, not a real tumor, which does not cause any damage to the body, and no drug can be eaten to be able to eliminate it. It is quite understandable that if taking medicine can eliminate hemangioma, then all the blood vessels in our body will be eliminated. In the past, it was always thought that hemangioma could easily rupture in the body and cause hemorrhage, so the previous view was that hemangioma in the liver needed to be removed surgically. Through decades of medical clinical observation and experience, evidence now shows that hemangiomas in the liver basically do not rupture unless they are very large, located on the surface of the liver, and are subject to trauma to cause rupture. Therefore, it is now believed that liver hemangiomas under 10 cm do not require any treatment and can be observed for growth on an outpatient basis. If the hemangioma is more than 10 cm, or if the patient has a heavy psychological burden and certain symptoms, mostly due to the feeling of fullness caused by the increase of the size of the hemangioma on the stomach, surgical removal can be considered. I do not recommend interventional treatment, especially if there are no symptoms and no treatment is needed. Because interventional treatment may cause partial embolization of the hemangioma and local necrosis and fibrosis, something that was asymptomatic and did not need treatment may instead cause uncomfortable symptoms after intervention. Please pay attention to all patients: go to a regular hospital to see a doctor, don’t easily listen to the nonsense on the Internet, many of the statements on the Internet also need to be analyzed and supplemented by doctors in regular hospitals! Not read the information about the disease and know the normal value of the test indicators can diagnose the disease and choose the treatment plan, when the doctor is actually quite complicated!