With socioeconomic development, the incidence of orbital wall fractures due to traffic and sports injuries has increased. The disease has a typical history of trauma and can present with diplopia, ocular motility disorders, sensory abnormalities in the distribution area of the infraorbital nerve, ocular invagination and epistaxis. There are also patients who do not have these symptoms at the time of the initial injury and develop ocular entropion only after a period of time. The disease is relatively easy to diagnose clinically by ocular muscle pull test and CT imaging. The choice of conservative or surgical treatment is different for each patient with different injuries. Surgical treatment requires strict indications for orbital wall revision for orbital burst fracture and preoperative screening evaluation. Jin Shuhong, Ophthalmic Plastic and Cosmetic Surgery, Anyang Eye Hospital Most ophthalmologists currently believe that the timing of surgery should be chosen in about two weeks or after the edema has subsided, and then the decision for surgical intervention should be made after observing the status of diplopia and the degree of ocular entropion. If CT shows extraocular muscle atresia and orbital volume enlargement, obvious eyeball recession greater than 2mm, large extent of orbital wall fracture area and severe diplopia, one should be prepared for surgery, otherwise conservative treatment is possible. We have observed clinically that early ocular muscle retraction training may free the ectopic orbital soft tissue and rectus muscle from the embeddedness, prevent adhesions and deformity healing, and also help to loosen adhesions for later surgical intervention.