I. Should I treat hemangioma and when is the best time to treat it? The question of whether hemangioma should be treated or not, or whether it is better to treat it as early as possible, or whether it can be treated later, has often troubled many parents. Although it is said in theory or in previous textbooks that hemangioma has the possibility of receding on its own, in many cases the treatment should be based on the actual situation, and the theory should not be copied. The actual experience of hemangioma treatment in general is that if the hemangioma is really mild and really does not continue to develop, it can be closely observed first, and some of the milder hemangiomas may subside on their own. However, if the hemangioma is already very big or very fast, it should be treated early, after all, the smaller the hemangioma is, the more likely it will recede on its own, but if the area of the hemangioma is already very big or the speed of expansion is already very fast, the chance of receding on its own is smaller, and the chance of continuing to expand is greater, so it is best to treat it early at this time, although treatment is risky, but if If the hemangioma grows so fast that the risk of not treating it is greater than the risk of treating it, personal experience is that it is better to treat it, because it is very difficult for a large hemangioma to subside, and sooner or later, it will still have to be treated, and it will be more difficult to cure it then. The side effects will be even greater when the hemangioma is bigger and more drugs are used. No matter what method of treatment you use, as long as you are willing to treat it several times, the course of treatment can be cured, and the cure is not the most difficult thing, but the difficult thing is whether to cure it or not, or whether it is necessary to cure it. I personally think that the treatment of hemangioma should avoid two extremes, sometimes the treatment is not treated, negative waiting, always thinking that it will subside by itself, it may delay the treatment time, but in turn over-treatment, it is not always good. Because the harm of hemangioma is mainly the destruction of local tissues caused by the rapid expansion of hemangioma, so when the hemangioma is large and fast, it should be treated, but when the hemangioma is under control and has mostly receded, it can be treated slowly first, and if it can recede on its own, it should not be treated. How to treat, when to treat, and to what extent to treat, we must weigh the trade-offs and not apply the theories in textbooks or on the internet. The best treatment for hemangioma is to choose the right treatment method according to the needs of the disease, and to choose the right treatment method for the symptoms. No method is the best, and no method is the worst. Theoretically, strawberry hemangioma can be treated with laser, injection, medicine, isotope, even surgery, minimally invasive intervention, superconducting intervention, etc. All treatments are effective. However, in practice, most hospitals that are equipped with a full range of treatment methods and not a single one, and that are commonly accepted by most departments, or most hospitals recommend laser or injection treatment, but my personal experience is that the combination of injection and laser treatment is often used to reduce the side effects of both and to improve the efficacy. And some particularly serious, or very large area, that is to take medication treatment. Surgery, minimally invasive interventions, and superconducting interventions are used to do vascular malformations that are more targeted. Even if the remaining ones will not recede on their own, as long as they are controlled and not enlarged, it is better to treat the remaining parts after a longer time interval, or to treat the remaining ones with topical medication than to over-treat them. If it is a cavernous hemangioma or a not very serious mixed hemangioma, the most common treatment is local injection of drugs. If the hemangioma is very large in size, it is usually treated with oral medication. The commonly used medications are hormones and insulin, which have many side effects but usually do not require hospitalization for observation. But if it is not a hemangioma, but a large vascular malformation, such as venous malformation, is not very serious, generally is also treated with local injection of drugs, but generally with 5% cod liver oil sodium, anhydrous ethanol or polyglaucine these drugs are more appropriate, or some more serious, can do minimally invasive intervention or surgery, minimally invasive intervention or surgery for vascular malformation, that is called targeted, this time with that is very But minimally invasive interventions and surgery require general anesthesia for inpatient treatment.