Common neurodevelopmental disabilities involve intellectual, motor, language, and social dysfunction, such as cerebral palsy, mental retardation, autism spectrum disorders, and speech and language disorders. The common early manifestation of these disabling disorders is developmental backwardness. These seizures are often symptoms of intractable epilepsy or epileptic encephalopathy, which are mild but have a huge impact on the brain and cause great cognitive damage, resulting in unsatisfactory rehabilitation of the original disease or even regression or deterioration. The key to treatment is early and effective antiepileptic drug therapy, timely seizure control, and protection of brain function rather than blind rehabilitation programs. The following recommendations remind parents to pay attention to: 1. Observe micro seizures. Common manifestations: 1) seizure wandering, staring, and termination of movement; 2) sudden brief flexion or extension movements, single or appearing in a series, accompanied by discomfort, panic or crying; 3) unexplained fall or weakness; 4) sudden opening of eyes during sleep with body tonicity, etc. Once these symptoms are detected and appear repeatedly, you should be alert and seek prompt medical attention from an epilepsy specialist for timely treatment. 2, the rehabilitation process of neurological disability with epilepsy carefully choose the program, mainly functional training, to avoid aggravating mental tension, shock, head stimulation. Use or avoid the use of neuroleptic drugs with caution. 3, children with active epilepsy are recommended to control epilepsy as the first priority, while controlling epilepsy, home rehabilitation under the guidance of a doctor, so that both epilepsy treatment and rehabilitation are not lost 4, children with slow progress or stagnation or regression in the rehabilitation process are promptly rechecked to find the cause. It is recommended that children with neurological disabilities are at high risk for epilepsy and often have multiple disabilities together, and the age range of epilepsy onset is large. It is recommended that they must be properly diagnosed, properly risk assessed, reasonably selected for rehabilitation treatment programs, and regularly evaluated for efficacy and follow-up under the guidance of a regular pediatric neurorehabilitation physician.