Patient: Please help Professor Yang Bin to see if the child can be cured? The child is now half a month old and has a cleft in his lower eyelid. When he opens his eyes, his eyes look big, and his nose is not growing, so his nostrils look big. The child has a congenital craniofacial cleft (Tessier’s cleft #3). This deformity, also known as orbital-nasal cleft, is characterized by a downward displacement of the medial canthus and a deficiency of the lower eyelid. In severe cases, the orbit, nasal cavity and maxillary sinus are connected. If left unrepaired for a long time, it can lead to corneal leukoplakia, resulting in visual impairment. This deformity should be repaired and reshaped as soon as possible. First, soft tissue flaps are applied to repair the inner canthus and lower lid defects to protect the eye from complications such as keratoconus or injury; the nose is partially repositioned to restore the general shape of the nose. Bone defects can be repaired later.