If adhesive bowel obstruction is caused after laparoscopic surgery, it will be serious when the adhesion is severe, but if the adhesion is mild, it will gradually recover later and does not affect the bowel function. If the abdominal cavity is purely diseased without the formation of peritonitis or intra-abdominal intestinal adhesions, it is only purely visceral lesions, which generally do not lead to intestinal obstruction after laparoscopic surgery. When intestinal obstruction is caused after laparoscopic surgery, most of them belong to adhesive intestinal obstruction. When the lesion has caused intestinal adhesion before surgery, the adhesion will be aggravated after surgery. If the adhesion is serious, the condition of postoperative adhesion will be very serious, and serious adhesive intestinal obstruction will require a second operation. If the adhesion is mild after laparoscopic surgery, generally no special treatment is needed, and it will improve with the adhesion or the gradual recovery of the intestinal tube in the later stage, which generally does not affect the intestinal function in the later stage. It is recommended that after laparoscopic surgery, patients follow the doctor’s instructions, as far as possible to reduce the phenomenon of postoperative complications, which is conducive to the recovery of the disease.