There is a possibility of recurrence after uterine tumor removal, only the chance varies, and it is related to the age of childbirth, the age period, and the location of fibroids. If a single fibroid is removed, the chance of recurrence is lower than that of multiple fibroids, and the chance of recurrence in women of childbearing age is higher than that of postmenopausal women. The reason is that even if the uterus and ovaries exist after removal, women of childbearing age still secrete estrogen and progesterone, and the fibroids are related to high estrogen levels, so they may recur again depending on the elevated hormone levels. Of course, recurrence is not at the original site, but also at other parts of the uterus, or other small fibroids that were not detected at the time, and then grew after surgery. Generally speaking, the chance of recurrence is much lower in postmenopausal women, because after menopause, the estrogen and progesterone level decreases, resulting in a decrease in the estrogen dependence of the fibroids, which leads to a lower recurrence rate of fibroids, and even the size of the original fibroids may shrink and other changes. In general, recurrence of fibroids is likely, depending on the age.