Women with severe diverticula and risk of uterine rupture will need surgery for diverticula if they still have reproductive needs. Surgery can also be performed if there is no reproductive requirement but the diverticulum is causing abnormal menstruation and has not been treated with medication. A diverticulum is a diverticulum-like lesion that develops at the site of uterine surgery after uterine surgery, when the endometrium and myometrium do not heal properly and a bulge develops outward toward the uterine cavity, which can communicate with the uterine cavity. This lesion can lead to abnormal menstruation, chronic pelvic pain, and infertility. The most effective treatment for uterine diverticulum is surgical removal of the diverticulum followed by suturing. Drug treatment mostly takes estrogen and progestin, oral compound short-acting contraceptive pills, but it is easy to recur after stopping the drug, and cannot change the morphological structure of diverticulum, if pregnant again, placenta previa, uterine rupture, etc. Therefore, it is recommended to have surgery if there is a need for childbearing. If a woman is diagnosed with diverticulum, she needs to go to a regular hospital and choose an appropriate treatment plan under the guidance of her doctor.