The incidence of spinal hemangioma is a kind of vascular malformation tumor that occurs in the vertebral body, and it is the most common benign tumor among spinal tumors. On CT cross-sectional views, cross-sectional views of multiple small dot-like thickened trabeculae in the vertebral body are seen, surrounded by limited hypodense areas caused by bone resorption and destruction; on MRI, moderate signal in T1WI and high signal in T2WI are common. Type I, no clinical symptoms, no invasive imaging; type II, back pain, no invasive imaging; type III, no clinical symptoms, invasive imaging; type IV, both clinical pain symptoms and invasive imaging. Treatment principles Type I does not require treatment; Type II can be considered for treatment; Type III has long-term follow-up with annual MRI examinations; and Type IV requires treatment. The treatment methods include surgical treatment, radiotherapy, arterial embolization, anhydrous alcohol injection, etc., but the results are not satisfactory, and it is only with the advent of percutaneous vertebroplasty (PVP) that a breakthrough in the treatment of spinal hemangioma has been achieved. complete relief of pain symptoms within 24-72h after treatment. Possible complications are: cemented pulmonary embolism and cement leakage.