My paper published in the Chinese Journal of Hernia and Abdominal Wall Surgery, Vol. 9, No. 4, August 2015, summarizes the surgical technique and case selection principles of “inguinal hernia treatment in pediatric patients with a single-port miniature laparoscopic endolaparoscopic ligation without manipulative forceps”. The terminology and knowledge background in the paper may be obscure to patients and families, so here is a brief explanation as follows: Chinese Journal of Hernia and Abdominal Wall Surgery is the most authoritative publication in the field of hernia and abdominal wall surgery in China. The single-port surgery mentioned in the paper does not require the application of forceps to assist, and can be completed by placing a miniature laparoscope in only one small hole, which is a true single-port surgery, as opposed to those so-called single-port surgeries that still require the assistance of forceps, which are actually two small holes put together to become one large hole and do not achieve the purpose of being more minimally invasive. The paper mentions that the 100% success rate of the single-port approach in female children and the 80% success rate of the single-port approach in male children is actually influenced by the different anatomical structures of men and women. The paper also mentions the effect of age, with a higher percentage of male children younger than 3 years old requiring an intermediate two-port approach, while females are not affected by the age factor. However, these statistics are only from the early stages of single-port surgery, and with the current normalization of single-port surgery, the success rate is close to 100% for both men and women.