Hemangioma is a common benign skin tumor, mostly found in infancy, so parents may worry whether it will continue to grow. Is there any good treatment method? Hemangioma is a generic term for the abnormal growth or malformation of all blood vessels, which can occur not only in the skin but also in deep tissues, muscles and internal organs such as the liver. There are actually many different kinds of hemangiomas that grow on the skin, not only in different shades of color, but also in different depths of the skin; some hemangiomas continue to grow and gradually fade away over time, while others have not changed since birth. According to the new classification method, only strawberry type hemangioma grows, so it is classified as a real vascular tumor, while wine colored spots and sinusoidal hemangioma are classified as vascular malformations because the lesions do not grow. Strawberry hemangiomas occur at birth in about 2% of cases, more in females than males, and 60% grow on the head and neck. Most of them start to grow gradually at the age of one month. Depending on the individual, some grow quickly and some grow slowly, and they grow completely at the age of half to one and a half years. Because these tumors can grow very quickly for a period of time, anxious parents often make poor decisions that can lead to sequelae, and cooperation with the physician and patience are the most important things in the treatment of strawberry hemangioma. Most strawberry hemangiomas disappear on their own, and there is usually no trace of them after they fade away, with a few cases of skin atrophy. However, those that grow in the respiratory tract, inside the mouth, outer ear canal and around the eyes need to be treated as soon as possible. For large tumors, local steroid injection is usually the most effective method. Wine stains are microvascular malformations with an incidence of about 3 per 1,000 in newborns. They are mostly on the face, pale red at birth, sometimes imperceptibly colored, and gradually deepen to purple over time. In adults, the lesions increase in thickness, gradually rising from a thin layer of skin and producing small nodules. Because they do not subside, they have previously been treated by surgical excision, which usually leaves numerous scars. Sinusoidal hemangioma is a venous malformation, usually bluish-purple in color, visible as a bulge in the skin, soft to the touch, smaller when pressed or elevated, larger when the patient exerts pressure, but otherwise uncomfortable and non-growing. Small lesions can be cured by excision, while large lesions that cannot be easily excised can be cured by local injection of sclerosing agents to shrink them after fibrosis. Hemangioma is a benign tumor, which is basically harmless to human body except for the unsightly appearance of growing on the face. If a hemangioma grows too fast or too large, has necrosis or bleeding, or is infected, consult a professional doctor as soon as possible. Most of the treatment is aimed at improving the appearance. Some parents, due to the lack of medical knowledge, make their own decisions and believe in the secret prescriptions and bias, so that the child’s facial hemangioma becomes a serious scar, which is regrettable.