Stomach pain is a common symptom, and there are many surgical diseases that cause stomach pain, the top three being acute appendicitis, acute cholecystitis, and acute intestinal obstruction. The top three are acute appendicitis, acute cholecystitis, and acute intestinal obstruction, and a significant portion of intestinal obstruction is adhesive intestinal obstruction after abdominal surgery. According to statistics, nearly 20% of abdominal surgeries have intestinal adhesions, and nearly 20% of these patients with intestinal adhesions have intestinal obstruction. Those who have suffered from intestinal obstruction have experienced fasting, gastric tube, infusion, conservative treatment, except for the aggravation of the disease that requires emergency surgery to prevent intestinal necrosis, most of them commit again after a year and a half, repeated attacks, plaguing their lives and even the lives of their families. The traditional treatment is that surgery can be considered for more than three episodes, but the proportion of recurrence of adhesional intestinal obstruction by traditional open surgery is very high, with a recurrence rate of 10-28% and the complexity of re-adhesion in the abdominal cavity after surgery, so many doctors and patients choose to avoid surgical treatment, so there are six or seven episodes of intestinal obstruction or even more than ten. With the application of minimally invasive laparoscopic technology, it has become possible to release intestinal obstruction without large incisions. After more than ten years of technical development, laparoscopic intestinal adhesion release is basically mature, but the main constraint on its promotion is that the chance of damaging the intestinal canal is higher compared with other laparoscopic abdominal surgeries, and fewer doctors have studied the diagnosis and treatment of adhesive intestinal obstruction. Minimally invasive surgery, because of its small postoperative incision in the abdominal wall, is less painful and resumes activity early after surgery, even within a few hours after surgery, to prevent intestinal adhesions, just like eating dumplings in the north, the freshly cooked dumplings have to be shaken to prevent sticking to the skin, and the intestinal canal in our abdominal cavity also has a similar need, so early activity after abdominal surgery has a positive effect on preventing intestinal adhesions. At present, we have accumulated rich experience in traditional open surgery for adhesive intestinal obstruction, and even more in the application of laparoscopic technology in adhesive intestinal obstruction. At present, our recurrence rate after surgery is less than 1%. Moreover, based on our proficiency in single-port laparoscopic technique, we have also carried out single-port laparoscopic intestinal adhesion release, which further reduces the abdominal wall incision, decreases pain, and achieves good treatment results. Thus the occurrence of intestinal obstruction is certainly painful and torturous, as long as people have a clear understanding of the disease, they can make choices in treatment that can benefit them.