Cutaneous hemangioma is a common congenital disease of infants and is a benign tumor of the blood vessels of the skin. Cutaneous hemangiomas can be classified as strawberry hemangioma, nevus, cavernous hemangioma and mixed hemangioma according to the depth of the skin area where they are located and their clinical features. The incidence is about 3-8%. They are most common in children and occur on the face and neck, but can also be found in various other areas, with skin and subcutaneous tissue being the most common. Hemangiomas are characterized by rapid growth, especially in the first year of life, and then slow down relatively. There are many treatment methods for hemangioma, such as freezing, electrocoagulation, traditional laser, microwave, radiotherapy, nuclear therapy, injection of sclerosing agent or surgical excision, and modern laser therapy, which can be used according to different types and locations. Because cryotherapy, microwave and electrocoagulation sometimes leave scars, only lesions on the extremities and trunk can be used, while the face can be treated with laser therapy and isotope dressing. The mechanism of radionuclide dressing treatment is that pure β-rays are emitted when the nuclide phosphorus-32 decays, which has short range, high ionization density and strong ionization ability, and its direct irradiation can inhibit the proliferation of capillaries in the local skin tissue, destroy the skin lesion, and atrophy or even occlude the local microvessels, thus achieving the effect of treating local superficial skin capillary hemangioma without causing damage to deep tissues and neighboring tissues. Nucleoside 32P dressing has achieved very good results, and the special dressing film is more effective in treating cutaneous hemangioma, and the treatment method is simple and easy to operate, and the patient is painless and does not damage the skin appearance, so it is suitable for cutaneous hemangioma of all age groups and is widely welcomed. The effectiveness rate is over 90%, and many children are cured without scars after treatment, and the cost is very small. Strawberry hemangioma, in particular, is mostly round or irregular in shape, rising above the skin surface, ranging from the size of a grain of rice to the size of a strawberry or larger, bright red or dark red, with clear edges, soft texture, and discoloration when pressed, mostly single, a few multiple, and also in a patchy distribution. Some of them are present at birth, while others are not obvious at birth and grow rapidly within 1 to 3 months after birth. Most parents of children with cutaneous hemangioma treat the disease correctly and actively cooperate with doctors in treatment, and have achieved very good results. I sincerely hope that all of you should find a doctor if you have a disease, don’t listen to hearsay, don’t think about it, but believe in science and medicine.