The first thing many people think of when they have an eye disease is to go to the hospital to see a Western doctor, but in fact there are times when some eye diseases are better than Western medicine. Chinese ophthalmology has a unique understanding of the physiological function of the human eye, pathological changes and the diagnosis and treatment of diseases. It regards the eye as part of an organic whole that is intrinsically linked to the internal organs and meridians, and therefore pays more attention to treating the root of the disease and discriminating treatment. So, which eye diseases are more suitable for Chinese medicine? Relatively speaking, Chinese medicine has advantages in the prevention and treatment of the following eye diseases. Hemorrhagic eye diseases: including retinal hemorrhage and vitreous hemorrhage caused by retinal perivenous inflammation, retinal vein obstruction, diabetic retinopathy, etc., anterior chamber, subconjunctival and ocular face hemorrhage caused by trauma, etc. Generally, the bleeding is stopped by cooling the blood and stopping the bleeding at the early stage, and promoted to dissipate and absorb the bleeding by activating the blood and removing stasis at the middle and late stages. A large number of hemostatic and blood-stasis invigorating herbs and traditional Chinese medicines such as Blood Dispersing and Brightening Tablets, Compound Hematopoeia, Melphalan, etc. have been widely used in clinical practice. Difficult chronic fundus diseases: For some eye diseases that are diagnosed clearly in western medicine but are judged as “incurable”, Chinese medicine has special methods to treat them. For example, Eye Bright Ling, Zhiyin Mingmu Pill, Yi Qi Mingmu Pill, Shu Liver Mingmu Pill, Qiming Pill, and light-enhancing pouches are effective in treating primary retinitis pigmentosa, age-related macular degeneration, high myopia, fundus degenerative disease, optic nerve atrophy, cataract, myopia, farsightedness, astigmatism, and so on. Recurrent eye diseases that cannot be cured by the application of western medicine: such as ptosis (myasthenia gravis), orofacial distortion due to facial palsy, viral keratitis, sclerositis, uveitis, uveal macroglossia, unexplained pediatric blinking, etc., are treated with good results by Chinese medicine. Post-operative complications: such as post-operative wounds that do not heal for a long time, post-operative low intraocular pressure, subretinal fluid after retinal detachment, glaucoma, post-cataract surgery, progressive decline in visual function after vitrectomy, etc. Currently, a set of effective methods have been explored using a combination of Chinese and Western theories. Conditioning of patients with eye diseases: After long-term treatment with western medicine or surgery, many patients with eye diseases have symptoms such as dizziness, laziness, tiredness, fullness, sweating, insomnia and dreaminess, and fever in the heart, etc., while there is no positive change in western medical examination, but they can recover quickly by applying whole-body conditioning with Chinese medicine.