Parastomal hernia is one of the most difficult surgical conditions to manage clinically and is mainly divided into colostomy hernia and ileostomy hernia. Clinical treatment of parastomal hernias, especially colostomy hernias, has been difficult and has evolved through four main periods. The earliest was the direct suture repair in the early 1960s and the stoma displacement surgery in the late 1960s and early 1970s, both of which had unsatisfactory results and a very high recurrence rate. Instead, many cases of patch infection have been reported, which is one of the most problematic complications of all abdominal wall hernia patch repair procedures. Since the 21st century, the use of laparoscopic repair techniques for the treatment of parastomal hernia has started to be reported, with the advantages of less trauma, faster recovery, lower recurrence rate, and fewer patch infections. At present, there is a class of laparoscopic parastomal hernia repair that can be classified as total laparoscopic parastomal hernia patch repair, which mainly includes Keyhole, Sugarbaker and Sandwich. The overall recurrence rate of total laparoscopic parastomal hernia patch repair is about 10%, with the highest rate being over 37% for the Keyhole procedure. We have carried out some similar surgical procedures in the early stage. Through clinical follow-up and experience, it was found that the therapeutic effect of this type of repair surgery, i.e., recurrence rate, and the safety of surgery, i.e., the incidence of surgical complications, were not very satisfactory. The reason for this is that the fully laparoscopic parastomal hernia patch repair surgery now carried out in the clinic has completely copied the concept and technique of laparoscopic incisional hernia repair. Although it has the advantages of being minimally invasive and away from stoma operation, it does not incorporate the special features of parastomal hernia itself. What is the special feature of parastomal hernia compared to incisional hernia? It is that an incisional hernia is just a defective weakness in the original incision of the abdominal wall, while a parastomal hernia is a weakness in the whole stoma area, where there is not only a local defect in the hernia ring, but also a large space in the local hernia sac, resulting in excessive herniation of the stoma intestine and other tissues into the hernia sac. Therefore, we believe that only by considering the hernia ring, hernia sac and herniated stoma intestinal tube of the parastomal hernia as a whole and treating them one by one, and paying attention to the functional reconstruction of the stoma area to restore it to the initial state just after the stoma, can we achieve better repair results of the parastomal hernia. Based on the early development of total laparoscopic parastomal hernia repair, we designed Lap-re-Do parastomal hernia repair surgery by combining the characteristics of parastomal hernia, especially the disease of colonic parastomal hernia itself. It combines the advantages of minimally invasive laparoscopic repair surgery, while at the same time utilizing the techniques of partial open surgery for anatomical restoration and functional reconstruction of the stoma area. The clinical conclusion does provide better surgical treatment results and improves the safety of the operation. Moreover, we found after a period of follow-up that the recovery of the post-repair appearance was also better than very good.