In children with right syringomyelia, a hospital visit is required to determine the treatment plan, taking into account the type of syringomyelia and the age of the patient. If syringomyelia occurs in newborns younger than six months of age, it is mostly congenital and has the potential to heal on its own as the body develops. However, if it does not heal on its own after more than six months, it may not heal on its own, and after one week of age, it usually does not heal on its own and requires surgery. In principle, most pediatric syringomyelia is a traffic syringomyelia, which means that the cystic cavity of the effusion is connected to the abdominal cavity, so the patient will have the characteristic that the volume of syringomyelia increases after activity and becomes smaller after resting flat. The procedure requires a high sphincter ligation, that is, a high incision, not a low incision. Because the majority of newborns belong to the traffic syringomyelia, even if they do not show symptoms, there is a congenital traffic syringomyelia from the pathogenetic characteristics, and the high ligation surgery can reduce the probability of recurrence after the surgery.