Surgery may be regarded as an angiogenesis-inducing condition since it evokes the release of many angiogenic factors. Regarding the mechanistic overlap between tumor-associated neovascularisation and (physiological) angiogenesis in response to injury and hypoxia, surgery may promote the uncontrolled growth of residual dormant tumor cells. With the advent of anti-angiogenic agents, surgeons will be faced with more patients undergoing surgery for primary and secondary tumors under anti-angiogenic treatment. This could present problems with regard to angiogenesis-dependent phenomena such as wound repair, healing of intestinal anastomoses and liver regeneration. In this review we will discuss these matters from a biomedical and clinical point of view.