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What qualifications do special ophthalmologists need?
Full-time undergraduate degree, aged 26 or below (born after 1992 1), major in clinical medicine and related fields.

The full name of ophthalmology is "ophthalmology specialty", which is a discipline that studies diseases related to the visual system, including the eyeball and its related tissues. Ophthalmology generally studies vitreous and retinal diseases, optometry, glaucoma and optic neuropathy, cataracts and other ophthalmic diseases.

Common ophthalmic diseases include: central serous retinopathy, dry eye, sympathetic ophthalmia, night blindness, blindness, amblyopia, astigmatism, trachoma, cataract, diabetic retinopathy, conjunctivitis, presbyopia, color blindness, iris heterochromia, retinitis pigmentosa, central retinal artery occlusion, retinal detachment, myopia, hyperopia, needle eye, snow blindness and visual impairment.

Related surgery:

Eye plastic surgery, ocular surface surgery, glaucoma surgery, lacrimal passage surgery, eye tumor surgery, excimer laser treatment of myopia, cataract phacoemulsification, foldable intraocular lens implantation, multifocal intraocular lens implantation, iris intraocular lens implantation, etc. Orbital tumor surgery, thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy treatment, hydroxyapatite orbital implant.

Artificial eye assembly, difficult vitreoretinal surgery in ophthalmology, complicated retinal detachment treatment, severe diabetic retinopathy, removal of nonmagnetic foreign bodies in the ball, standard trabeculectomy, compound trabeculectomy, etc.