Early detection, diagnosis and intervention of pediatric cerebral palsy can reduce the degree of disability in children. How can cerebral palsy be detected early? Currently, we can detect cerebral palsy as early as possible through the following 5 symptoms: 1. High risk factors for cerebral palsy are found before, during and after birth. Such as infection during pregnancy, rubella, severe hyperemesis, asphyxia at birth, prematurity, severe jaundice, and intracranial hemorrhage after birth of a child. 2.Children have difficulty feeding after birth, such as weak sucking, weak or excessive crying, and easily frightened. 3.Excessive quietness and little active movement. 4.Low motor development. For example, children from 3 months to 4 months old cannot hold their heads in the prone position or lift their heads unsteadily; at 4 months old, they are still unable to support weight with their forearms; they land on their toes when standing or their lower limbs are too straight and crossed. 5. Abnormal muscle tone and abnormal posture often appear, such as inward flexion of both hands, clenching of both fists, inward rotation of forearms, head and neck tilted back, etc. If parents find that their child has the above symptoms, they should immediately go to a regular hospital for screening and diagnosis, and if necessary, intelligence testing. If the diagnosis of cerebral palsy is confirmed, rehabilitation treatment can be arranged. Not long ago, we saw a nine-year-old child with cerebral palsy who had typical spastic cerebral palsy symptoms: toeing the ground, scissor gait, unable to run, and could only walk slowly and with small steps with the help of his family. I felt sorry for him because his type of cerebral palsy is actually the easiest to treat: rehabilitation after getting a diagnosis at an early stage, and then decompression surgery for him at an appropriate age (currently, the general choice is between 2.5 and 6 years old). After the surgery, we will consider whether he needs a second corrective surgery according to the degree of reduced muscle tone, and if everything recovers well, he will continue to receive rehabilitation treatment, which will have better results. The spasticity relief surgery we are talking about now mostly uses FSPR (functional selective spinal nerve heel dissection), which is the treatment of the posterior spinal nerve roots to comprehensively adjust the muscle tone of the patient, so that the muscle tone of the spastic muscles is as close to normal as possible. This child was not diagnosed at an early stage due to the negligence of his family and missed the best time for treatment, which greatly reduced the effectiveness of future treatment. Therefore, we would like to remind the parents of children with birth abnormalities such as difficult birth, premature birth, jaundice and oxygen deficiency to keep in mind the five symptoms mentioned above and send their children to a regular hospital for screening as soon as they find similar manifestations.