A few days ago, in the ophthalmology department of Shenyang Children’s Hospital, a child from Inner Mongolia came. According to his father, his son’s eyes were ulcerated and red and swollen, and the local hospital told him that the child needed surgery for this disease. But after the eye surgery, he had to get a big scar and even an ectropion, which would definitely affect his facial appearance. The family came all the way to Shenyang Children’s Hospital to seek new treatment in order to prevent their child from being scarred by the eye surgery as much as possible. Shenyang Children’s Hospital ophthalmologist examination, the child eye disease is actually a chalazion. However, because the onset of more than half a year, has not received formal treatment, the right eye has grown a large and small nine chalazion, the left eye grew seven. The chalazia grew in a different order, with the first one growing to a certain size, naturally breaking down and bleeding, and then forming a polypoid inflammatory granuloma, next to which new small chalazia grew. The child’s eye is a rotten peach, and there is no good place for it. When this disease reaches such a level, surgery is necessary. But after surgery and want a little scar does not fall, the difficulty is too big. After careful planning and preparation by the ophthalmologists of Shenyang Children’s Hospital, both eyes of the child had undergone an hour-long surgery to remove the lesion and cosmetic surgery respectively. The doctors have successfully reduced the chance of scar production while eradicating the chalazion and achieving the desired results. Looking at the child bawling, the specialist said with great sadness that it was the ignorance of the child’s parents that had harmed the child. If the child had been treated at the hospital six months ago when the chalazion first appeared, he would not have had to suffer so much. In fact, almost all of us have experienced red, swollen eyes and small swellings when we were children. Some people say “eye of a needle”, others say “eye bean”. Older people say, “It’s okay, just wait for it to come out! It is this stereotype that makes the ophthalmologists at the Children’s Hospital face the same kind of children almost every day, light or heavy. ”Needle eyes” are medically called wheals, and are infections of eyelash follicles, eyelid sebaceous glands, and metaplastic sweat glands. The medical term “ophthalmoplegia” is chalazion, which is an idiopathic sterile chronic granulomatous inflammation of the eyelid lid glands. Because of the similarity of the two sites and symptoms, many people can easily confuse “chalazion” for “pinhole”. Both can cause bloodstream infection, secondary sepsis, and even life-threatening if anti-inflammatory treatment is not implemented in a timely manner. Therefore, ophthalmologists remind parents that they must abandon any old habits of refusing to seek medical attention and delaying treatment, and that children suffering from eye diseases must be treated in a timely manner at the pediatric ophthalmology department of a regular hospital, never let a small eye bean become a big disaster.