What is FSRP surgery for cerebral palsy: The FSPR surgery, or functional selective posterior spinal nerve root dissection, is also known as “Phase I surgery for cerebral palsy”. It is a procedure to treat the posterior spinal nerve roots of patients with spastic cerebral palsy to adjust the muscle tone of the spastic muscles as close to the normal state as possible. It has become the most effective method to relieve the spasticity of cerebral palsy muscles and improve motor dysfunction. The advantages are complete release of spasticity, good effect of reducing muscle tone, while preserving sensory function, significantly improving gait, and significantly improving joint deformity caused by muscle spasticity. 1.Safety The surgery technique is mature, and the nationally renowned experts guide the surgery to ensure the safety of the child and the surgery effect. 2.Small wound and quick recovery The surgical incision is small, only 3 cm, easy to recover. 3, the postoperative effect is obvious Patients in the postoperative spasm is completely lifted, reduce muscle tone effect; 4, the postoperative limb motor function is not affected, retain the sensory function. FSPR surgery is performed by selectively blocking the posterior root of the spinal nerve, which is a sensory branch, not a motor nerve, and by cutting the posterior root of the spinal nerve, it can significantly reduce muscle tone without affecting the movement of the limb of the child in any way, and has little effect on the sensation of the limb of the child. For lighter children, it can be restored to normal after surgery; for more serious children, it can provide a good foundation for rehabilitation training. The high muscle tone of children with spastic cerebral palsy can cause stiffness and contracture of the joints and loss of joint movement function, resulting in permanent deformity when the limbs are tonic or flexed in severe cases. The high muscle tone of the limbs makes rehabilitation training difficult, and children with spasticity are often unable to actively complete training movements due to uncoordinated muscle tone, and cannot perform passive functional training due to limb pain, etc. FSPR surgery is effective in relieving spasticity, restoring normal muscle tone to the limbs, enabling them to receive rehabilitation training, and not recurring after surgery, creating a good foundation for further rehabilitation training. It does not affect the anterior nerve roots and motor function of the innervated muscles, and rehabilitation training can be carried out 3 days after surgery.