Extensive hysterectomy can provide long-term survival or even cure for most patients with cervical and endometrial cancers. However, since the scope of this surgery is relatively large, this type of surgery is not perfect and can lead to many inconveniences for patients. The most important ones are difficulty in urination and incontinence, followed by difficulty in defecation, dry stools, and lack of sensation in the stool, and for those young patients, the most important problem is lack of sensation in sexual life. These conditions are mainly caused by surgery, which requires the removal of the patient’s entire primary ligament, in which the main parasympathetic nerve is present, and by surgery that requires the removal of part of the uterosacral ligament, in which the parasympathetic nerve, which innervates the pelvic organs, is also present. The understanding of this situation should be considered as follows: the inevitable side effects of the thoroughness of the extensive hysterectomy in order to obtain the patient’s long-term survival!