Getting off the floor 6 hours after hepatectomy, eating in 24 hours, and being discharged from the hospital after 120 hours of healing is not a fantasy, it’s a fact. Recently, the Department of Hepatobiliary and Biliary Medicine, under the leadership of Director Li Hucheng, performed laparoscopic hepatectomy for the first time in the whole army using Habbib knife for a patient with rare and low-grade malignant hepatic myofibroblastoma, with no intraoperative bleeding, little injury, light postoperative pain and fast recovery, showing good results. Habbib knife is a new type of scalpel, the principle of which is to coagulate hepatic tissues and close hepatic blood vessels through radiofrequency electricity at high temperature, thus avoiding the disadvantage of “cutting a knife and sewing a needle” in the operation, making the operation bleed less or even no bleeding, improving the efficiency of the operation, alleviating the postoperative pain, and eliminating the problem of liver ischemia and reperfusion caused by the hepatic portal blockade in the traditional open liver surgery. The liver ischemia and reperfusion injury caused by hepatic portal blockage in traditional open liver surgery is eliminated. It is reported that there are only three cases of laparoscopic liver resection using Habbib knife in the whole country, and Department of Hepatobiliary Medicine is the first one in the whole army. The female patient who underwent the first Habbib knife surgery in the whole army was from Shandong, 45 years old, who was diagnosed with a liver tumor one year ago, but had not been effectively treated. After coming to the hospital, she was diagnosed by Li Hucheng of Department of Hepatobiliary and Biliary Medicine, and confirmed to be an extremely rare low-grade malignant myofibroblastoma of the liver, and there were only a few cases reported in the relevant literature in the whole country. After a comprehensive examination, Director Li determined that liver tumor resection could be carried out, however, traditional open laparotomy, which requires a 25 cm long incision, not only affects the aesthetics, but also requires the patient to be bedridden for 72 hours and repeated use of painkillers, which is prone to cause damage to the body; if the surgery is performed by common laparoscopic surgery, intraoperative hemostasis becomes a difficult task, and the blood vessels of the liver have two sets of systems of hepatic arteries and portal veins, which have a rich blood flow, and once a large amount of bleeding will seriously affect the quality of surgery or even jeopardize the quality of surgery. If the bleeding is massive, it will seriously affect the quality of surgery and even jeopardize the patient’s life. After repeated weighing, Li Hucheng decided to perform laparoscopic resection with the newly introduced Habbib knife. Before the operation, Li Hucheng called Huang Hui, Wang Ruiguan, Wu Tiantian, Zhang Wei and other departmental staff to hold a discussion, and formulated a detailed surgical plan for the first case of Habbib knife laparoscopic surgery in the whole army. The surgery was successfully completed with the cooperation of Director Liu Xiuzhen of the Department of Anesthesiology. The surgery took two and a half hours and only required two small incisions of about one centimeter and two one-centimeter incisions to ensure postoperative aesthetics, and there was no blood transfusion during the surgery. Nurse leader Wang Lixin led the nursing team to carry out comprehensive and meticulous care so that the patient recovered smoothly after the operation. By the patient’s introduction, there were almost no pain symptoms after the operation. Hepatobiliary Division III used Habbib knife surgery for laparoscopic liver resection for the first time in the whole army, which is a bold attempt and innovation, fully reflecting the division’s “practicing real skills, dare to be the first in the world,” the courage and ability, and through the application of the new technology, shorten the length of hospitalization, improve the speed of recovery, reduce the cost of treatment, and further improve the department’s connotation construction. It has further improved the connotation construction of the department, and made the minimally invasive surgical technology of Hepatobiliary Department III and our hospital take another step forward.