Is TCM effective in treating eye diseases? Chinese ophthalmology has a unique understanding of the physiological functions of the human eye, pathological changes and the diagnosis and treatment of diseases. She regards the eye as part of the organic whole with internal organs and meridians as the inner connection, so TCM ophthalmology treats diseases from not seeing blood to stop bleeding, treating headache and foot pain, but treating the root of the disease and treating with evidence. So, which eye diseases are suitable to see TCM? Relatively speaking, Chinese medicine has advantages in the prevention and treatment of the following diseases. 1, hemorrhagic eye disease: including retinal hemorrhage and vitreous hemorrhage caused by retinal perivasculitis, venous obstruction, diabetic retinopathy, trauma-induced anterior chamber, subconjunctival and ocular face hemorrhage, 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 activating herbs and traditional Chinese medicines, such as Yunnan Baiyao, Haematopoietin and Ge Gensu, have been widely used in clinical practice. 2. Difficult chronic fundus diseases: For some eye diseases that are diagnosed clearly by western medicine but are judged as “incurable” by lack of treatment, Chinese medicine has special methods to treat them. 3.Recurrent eye diseases that cannot be cured by western medicine: such as ptosis (muscle weakness lid type), facial palsy, viral keratitis, unexplained pediatric blinking, etc., can be treated with Chinese medicine or acupuncture with good results. 4. 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, progressive decline in visual function after glaucoma surgery, etc., a set of effective methods has been explored by combining Chinese and Western theories. 5. Conditioning during and after the disease: Many patients, after long-term treatment with western medicine or surgery, have symptoms such as dizziness, laziness, tiredness, fullness, sweating, insomnia and dreaminess, and fever in the heart, etc., while there is generally no positive change in western medical examination.