There is a type of hernia known as an easily reversible hernia, in which the hernia contents are easily returned to the abdominal cavity after herniation and can be returned on their own, i.e., self-healing. However, a recurrent hernia may turn into an incarcerated hernia. Easy to recurring hernia refers to the hernia content protrudes from the abdominal wall without pressure or incarceration, can be returned by themselves or by hand, mostly in the abdominal wall flaccid elderly patients. The hernia protrudes from the abdominal wall when standing, coughing or laboring, forming a lump in the inguinal area, which can be returned to the abdominal cavity when lying down and the lump disappears. Easy to recurrent hernia repeatedly protrudes, causing the hernia sac neck friction, adhesion is easy to form difficult to recurrent hernia, when the formation of jammed or incarcerated can develop into an incarcerated hernia. Prolonged compression can cause ischemic necrosis of the hernia contents, forming a strangulated hernia, which is the most serious form of hernia. Patients with recurrent hernias should pay more attention to minimizing labor or strenuous exercise, and not coughing or defecating too hard to avoid repeated protrusion of hernia contents. Once found that the mass is difficult to self-recovery should be promptly to the hospital, timely reset, to avoid the development of strangulated hernia or even intestinal perforation or intestinal necrosis. In addition, inguinal hernias in infants under 1 year old may heal on their own, which is a normal physiological phenomenon.