Cerebral palsy has always been a “difficult problem” for society and medical professionals, so how to treat cerebral palsy has become an important topic for many experts to explore and ponder. These angels with broken wings are unable to walk like normal people because of limb limitations, and are unable to communicate well with society because of speech, visual and hearing impairments and mental impairments. Most of them often spend their childhood in seeking medical treatment and are destined to be gloomy. It is gratifying to know that the medical staff did not forget about them, and after numerous setbacks, they finally found a way to let them take wings and fly in the sky. Cerebral palsy, as a non-progressive brain injury disease, has lesions in the brain and involves the extremities. The main symptoms are postural abnormalities and motor dysfunction. The brain damage caused by cerebral palsy is irreparable, as clearly explained by experts. The focus of cerebral palsy treatment is to effectively improve the postural abnormalities and motor dysfunction that have been caused. After long-term clinical practice and summary, it is found that most patients who receive surgery combined with rehabilitation training often recover much better than single rehabilitation treatment or surgery. In view of this, experts have carried out “surgery + rehabilitation training” to treat cerebral palsy in clinical practice and achieved good results. Let’s look at a case of cerebral palsy before and after surgery and rehabilitation. Yang Yang, a child with cerebral palsy from Hebei, was born prematurely and lacked oxygen, resulting in cerebral palsy. At 8 months after birth, the child had poor postural stability, could not sit well, and always fell backwards and forwards. At one year old, he could not walk and his head was always tilted. After medication and rehabilitation, the effect was still unsatisfactory. Now the child is 8 years old, but he still cannot walk by himself, and both knees are flexed and cannot be straightened, and his right foot is internally rotated when walking. Later, peripheral nerve narrowing was performed for the child, after which the child could straighten both legs and walk independently, and his walking posture was basically close to that of a normal child. The child in this case has a clear spastic type of cerebral palsy, which accounts for about 70% of all cerebral palsy. In addition, tardive dyskinesia and ataxic cerebral palsy are also more common in clinical practice. For each type of cerebral palsy, various surgical procedures are clinically targeted to relieve and improve the symptoms of limb movement disorders, mental retardation, speech disorders, salivation, strabismus, etc. in cerebral palsy patients.