Hepatic hemangiomas are benign lesions of the liver that develop slowly and are not malignant, so smaller hemangiomas have no major impact on the body and therefore do not need to be treated. However, because people often believe that hemangiomas grow quickly, destroy the liver, and rupture and bleeding are fatal, they have many concerns and request surgery even for small ones of 2cm or 3cm. It is generally believed that the rupture rate is very low, but bleeding due to traumatic extrusion and medically induced injury cannot be excluded. Female patients with larger hemangiomas in late pregnancy (high abdominal pressure) and infants have a high chance of hemangioma rupture and deserve attention. The indications for surgery of hepatic hemangioma are currently considered to be: obvious clinical symptoms; (2) large or huge Φ>5cm; (3) age <60 years; (4) good organ function and health status; (5) uncertain diagnosis, not excluding malignant tumor; (6) estimated possibility of complete resection according to the location; (7) ruptured bleeding or biliary bleeding, and interventional embolization can be performed first to stop the bleeding if possible, followed by (7) ruptured bleeding or biliary bleeding, if possible, interventional embolization can be performed first to stop the bleeding, followed by secondary resection. Treatment: Non-surgical interventional therapies such as hepatic artery embolization, sclerotherapy, adrenocorticotropic hormone therapy, electrochemical therapy and radiotherapy cannot completely eliminate the tumor, so surgical treatment should be the first choice. Previous surgeries are mainly partial hepatectomy; lobectomy, hemihepatectomy or hepatic trilobectomy, etc. This may include the liver without lesions that are unnecessarily removed, which is detrimental to the patient's postoperative recovery, especially in patients with cirrhosis. For small CHL without resection or debridement, thick silk sutures (or bundles) can be used, which are simple and effective, or anhydrous ethanol injection therapy, which is simple and applicable.