Cerebral palsy refers to a syndrome of progressive brain damage in infants from before birth to 1 month after birth due to a variety of reasons, which is mainly characterized by movement disorders and postural abnormalities, accompanied by varying degrees of mental retardation, speech disorders, epilepsy, and so on. The causes of fetal cerebral palsy are hereditary and acquired. Acquired causes include prenatal malformations of embryonic brain development, such as viral infection, severe nutritional deficiencies, and radiation therapy during pregnancy, preterm placental abruption during labor, birth injury, emergency labor, obstructed labor, and hemorrhagic disorders during delivery, and postnatal head trauma, persistent convulsions, and infections of the central nervous system. Hereditary factors include familial genetic disorders, inbred marriages of parents Genetic factors include familial genetic diseases, parent’s inbreeding, and the presence of cerebral palsy and mental retardation in the family.