Iridocyclitis is a common disease that particularly affects the uvea in young and middle-aged populations, accounting for about half of all uveitis, and can present as acute, chronic, granulomatous, and non-granulomatous inflammation. It is closely related to immune and infectious factors and is a major cause of blindness in the workforce. Iridocyclitis can be classified according to etiology: the first group presents only with acute anterior uveitis, which is mostly HLA-B27 antigen-positive and mostly combined with ankylosing spondylitis, psoriatic arthritis, Reiter syndrome, and inflammatory bowel disease; the second group is chronic anterior uveitis, such as Fuchs syndrome and white uveitis in children; the third group can present with both acute verification and The third category is the one that can present with both acute verification and chronic inflammation; juvenile chronic arthritis, tuberculosis, and syphilis can cause such inflammation. The diagnosis of iridocyclitis can be made on the basis of the patient’s clinical presentation. Since a variety of systemic diseases can cause or accompany this type of uveitis, determining the etiology and concomitant causes is of great value in guiding treatment and determining prognosis. Therefore, a detailed history should be taken for acute anterior uveitis, especially for sacroiliac with joint pain, joint erythema, urethritis, gastrointestinal abnormalities, respiratory abnormalities, psoriasis, skin lesions, etc. to determine if there is concomitant ankylosing spondylitis, Reiter syndrome, inflammatory bowel disease, ringworm arthritis, combination, syphilis and other diseases. Laboratory tests include routine blood work, blood sedimentation, HLA-B27 antigen typing, etc. For those suspected of being caused by pathogenic infections, appropriate pathogenic tests are performed. Rheumatoid priming tests are generally of no clinical value for the diagnosis of uveitis. Prophylactic treatment as well as early detection and aggressive management of complications are key to successful vision maintenance. Iridocyclitis, known in Chinese medicine as pupillary syndrome, is better treated by identifying the symptoms and can be treated with a combination of Chinese and Western medicine. Treatment is divided into the following four types: 1. Wind-heat of the liver meridian: eye pain, headache, photophobia and tearing, redness and redness of the holding wheel, ciliary pressure pain, posterior corneal wall deposits, cloudy atrial fluid, or dry mouth, red tongue with thin coating and string pulse. Treatment: Dredge the liver to disperse wind and clear heat. Prescription: See Runner’s keratitis. If the affected eye is red and painful, choose to add raw earth, tannin, salvia, celandine. 2, incandescent liver and gallbladder fire: pupil very small, bead pain and refusal to press, pain even eyebrow shuttle, cloudy atrial fluid, with bitter mouth and dry throat; irritability, irritable, tongue rainbow coating yellow, pulse string count. Treatment: Clear the liver and gallbladder. Prescription: see monoherpetic viral keratitis. Can add dandruff, red peony, etc. 3, wind-damp heat: eye symptoms plus head heaviness and chest tightness, aching limbs, yellow tongue coating, pulse strings or moistening. Treatment: dispel wind and remove dampness and clear heat. Prescription: Fengfeng, Manchuria, Qianhu, Qiangwu, Dahurica, Fenghuang, Huanglian 10 grams each, Huangbai, Zhimu, Scutellaria, Gardenia 12 grams each, Shengdi 15 grams, cold water stone 45 grams, raw licorice 6 grams. 4, false fire on the inflammation: the late stage of the disease has become chronic, red red lighter or not red and sometimes pain, pupil dryness, dry eyes do not relax, and see the false annoyance sleeplessness, heat in the heart of the hands and feet, dry tongue and throat, red tongue, thin pulse. Treatment: Nourishing Yin and lowering fire, clearing the liver and brightening the eyes. Herbs: Zhi Mu, Huang Bai, Cornu Cervi Pantotrichum, Ze Di, Shan Yao, Fu Ling 12g each, Shu Di 20g, Dan Pi 10g, Dan Shen 20g, Cassia Seed 15g. Because of the complex structure of the pupil, the physiopathology of the pupil is not only related to the liver, spleen, stomach and kidney, but also has a close relationship with other internal organs, so the iris ciliary disease in the pupil should be identified according to the characteristics of the different stages of manifestation, and the relationship between the disease and the positive energy should be noted. If the evil is light and the vital energy is strong, the disease will be light and easy to heal, otherwise it will be heavy. If the disease does not heal over time, complications are likely to occur. When treating the disease, we should closely follow the disease mechanism to clear the heat and detoxify the toxin with obvious curative effect, evacuate the epidemic and poisonous evil to relieve the pain obviously, and the recovery period should nourish Yin and lower the fire, clear the liver and brighten the eyes. In conclusion, the eye is part of the organic whole with the internal organs and meridians as the inner connection. The treatment of eye disease in Chinese medicine has many advantages over the allopathic treatment in Western medicine, from not seeing blood to stop bleeding, treating the head when it hurts and treating the foot when it hurts, but treating the root of the disease and treating with evidence, which has many advantages over the allopathic treatment in Western medicine, and has advantages for the prevention and treatment of the disease.