Interventional treatment is an emerging and advanced minimally invasive treatment method in the world today. Perhaps you are already familiar with the common conventional methods of treating fibroids and adenomyoma (a common disease that causes menstrual pain), but you are still unfamiliar with this treatment method. What is the difference between it and conventional treatment? What are the advantages? First of all, let us understand the general knowledge of fibroids and adenomyosis, so that we can have a better understanding of interventional treatment. Uterine fibroids are common in women over 40 years old, with an incidence of about 20%, and are benign tumors that grow in one or more grains in the uterus. These tumors are nourished by the rich blood vessels of the uterus and continue to grow in size. The significant symptoms are enlargement of the uterus (patients often feel that their lower abdomen is bulging and many think they are gaining weight!) Many patients think they are fat!), heavy menstrual flow, anemia, which affects their life and work, and in rare cases, malignant transformation. The common treatments for fibroids are generally divided into three types: ① taking Chinese and Western medicine, which can control the growth of fibroids, but after stopping the medicine, the tumor grows bigger and faster than before; and taking medicine for a long time can cause side effects such as impaired liver function, osteoporosis and masculinization; ② laparoscopic resection. It is to remove the tumor through laparoscopy. Since small fibroids are easily left behind, the recurrence rate is high, and the recurrence rate two years after surgery is as high as 20-25%; ③ open hysterectomy, which means that the whole uterus is completely removed. As we all know, the role of the uterus in addition to the basic functions of menstruation and fertility, but more importantly, the uterus has an endocrine function, maintaining the role of female characteristics, the loss of the uterus, the consequences can be imagined, not only the loss of fertility, but also premature aging, loss of libido, affecting the quality of sexual life. Adenomyosis is also a common disease among women. The symptoms are heavy menstrual flow and painful periods, and patients can be in too much pain to work, live and study normally. For treatment, there is no good method, usually taking painkillers for pain relief, and Chinese and Western medicines that inhibit ovarian function, so that patients do not have menstruation to achieve the therapeutic effect of pain relief and stopping the volume but the treatment is not effective because adenomyosis does not respond well to drugs, and the symptoms return after stopping the drugs, and the side effects such as impaired liver function, osteoporosis and masculinization are easy to occur after taking the drugs. For fibroids, it blocks the blood vessels supplying nutrients to the fibroids, so that the fibroids lose nutrients for growth and slowly shrink, necrosis and fall off, which is especially effective for multiple fibroids; for adenomyosis, it blocks the blood vessels of the lesions, so that the lesions become ischemic and necrotic. Since interventional therapy blocks the root cause of the lesion at once, the recurrence rate is very low and it has no effect on the normal function of the uterus, the menstrual flow returns to normal, the patient does not need to take other drugs after treatment, and for some patients with adenomyosis fertility is restored. Interventional treatment is a minimally invasive procedure. By minimally invasive, it means that the wound after the procedure is extremely small, leaving only a small scar of 2-3 mm on the inner thigh. The small wound, in addition to not affecting the appearance, is more importantly, the postoperative damage to the body is small, the body recovers quickly, usually 3-4 days can be discharged from the hospital, and after a week of rest after discharge can go to work.