General knowledge about the disease of pediatric cerebral palsy

  The full name of cerebral palsy is pediatric cerebral palsy, which mainly manifests as mental retardation, epilepsy, sensory perception disorder, communication disorder, behavioral abnormalities and other abnormalities. In recent years, the prevalence of cerebral palsy has been increasing. According to statistics, the current prevalence of cerebral palsy in China is 0.18-0.59%, and there are more than 6 million people with cerebral palsy nationwide, with 40,000-50,000 new cases of cerebral palsy each year.  Because many children with cerebral palsy do not have obvious symptoms in infancy, most of them have poorer development than normal children of the same age in various aspects, such as general weakness, weakness or tightness of limbs, and are often mistaken by parents or non-specialists as malnutrition and late development, and even think that cerebral palsy is incurable and miss the best treatment period, resulting in lifelong disability.  Pediatric cerebral palsy is a major disease that causes disability in children. Rescue treatment and rehabilitation for children with cerebral palsy allows for early detection and diagnosis as well as early intervention, enabling them to rebuild their life, learning and social interaction abilities to the greatest extent possible and laying an important foundation for their life development. Rescue rehabilitation treatment and training for children with cerebral palsy is a salvage project to improve the condition of children with disabilities because of its low investment, good effect and significant social benefits compared with adult rehabilitation.  In recent years, Prof. Zhou Xuelong, an expert building of Guangxi University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, has led a team of minimally invasive acupuncture treatment to carry out the minimally invasive technique of small acupuncture combined with chiropractic manipulation to treat spastic cerebral palsy, bringing good news to the majority of children with cerebral palsy.