Uterine fibroids are one of the most common benign tumors in women, and according to the literature, about 20-30% of women over 35 years old suffer from this disease. Patients with uterine fibroids have different psychological reactions due to different information received, education, age, symptoms, family economic situation and many other factors. This also leads to different medical history and different disease results. I often see people who are very frightened when they find small fibroids on their uterus during physical examination and ask for treatment or even surgery, which often makes me feel helpless. I also often encounter people who have severe anemia or fibroids that are already huge, but they refuse surgery because they are afraid of surgery or want to get lucky until menopause, which makes me sad. I want to give you a heads up: don’t panic when you have fibroids, go to a regular hospital, get a treatment plan from an experienced doctor, and take appropriate measures for observation or treatment. Nowadays, surgery is not scary, and most of them can be treated by laparoscopic and hysteroscopic minimally invasive surgery without surgery. The following is a bit of treatment guidance advice for reference. I. No treatment needed: small fibroids, asymptomatic, slow growth rate, only need to follow up and observe. 2. Drug therapy is needed: those with mild symptoms, near menopausal age, and those whose general condition cannot tolerate surgery. 3.Surgical treatment: 1.Patients with fibroids have anemia, general weakness, pallor, panic and shortness of breath due to heavy menstrual flow and long periods, which may cause anemic heart disease in serious cases. 2. The fibroids compress the pelvic organs and show corresponding symptoms, such as pressing the bladder forward and showing urinary urgency, frequency and even difficulty in urination. Backward pressure on the rectum may lead to falling and even difficulty in passing stool. 3.Uterine fibroids cause infertility, miscarriage, stillbirth, etc. 4.Suspected malignant fibroids 5.Specialized fibroids: submucosal fibroids, cervical fibroids, broad ligament fibroids, fibroids that cannot be distinguished from ovarian tumors in terms of location 6.Subplasmal fibroids with twisted tissues 7.Single fibroids larger than 5 cm in diameter, fibroids with uterine enlargement exceeding the size of the uterus at 10 weeks of pregnancy.