For 7 years, the young girl always had “angry eyes”, and she was distressed by the fact that she had to go around to seek medical help. Recently, Dr. Wu Wencan of the Optometry Hospital of Wenzhou Medical College used advanced endoscopic technology to perform a successful “eye reset” for the 21-year-old Fujian girl. Dr. Wu said the girl’s disease is medically known as “thyroid-related ophthalmopathy”. It is one of the most complex ophthalmic diseases, and its pathogenesis is still unclear, but it is thought to be an autoimmune disease related to abnormal thyroid function. Patients often present with receding eyelids and protruding eyeballs that give the appearance of “angry eyes”. In some severe cases, the disease can be complicated by exposure to corneal ulcers and compression of the optic nerve, resulting in severe vision loss and even blindness. The patient’s mother said that before the surgery, her daughter had tried many treatments, but the results were not obvious. Experts from major hospitals in Beijing and Shanghai said that if surgery was used, there would be facial surgery scars, and the effect of “eye reset” was difficult to determine. After the surgery in Wenzhou, my daughter returned to normal, without a single incision and bruising on her face. Dr. Wu introduced that they adopt endoscopic minimally invasive technology to perform “eye repositioning” for the patient. The orbital tissue structure is very complex, and this surgery requires both the removal of bony tissue from the medial wall of the orbit through the nasal cavity, and the removal of the growth of intraorbital fat tissue from the back of the eye through this pathway, so that the “eyeball can be reset” without shifting to one side. Therefore, this surgery is very difficult to perform. To date, the Optometry Hospital has performed approximately 50 such surgeries.