Cranial bone repair is usually caused by traumatic brain injury resulting in injury, cranial bone repair is a common brain surgery for traumatic brain injury and craniotomy surgery, etc. resulting in cranial bone defects and its repair of a common brain surgery. Such as craniocerebral trauma and brain surgery to remove the bone flap, benign tumors or tumor-like resection of the skull, chronic osteomyelitis of the skull and so on. So, how long can I get out of bed for cranial bone repair surgery? Generally, the first day of cranial bone repair surgery to closely observe the patient’s vital signs changes, there is no bleeding, there is no cerebral edema, there is no other conditions affecting the patient’s recovery. Therefore, on the first day, the patient is usually put in the intensive care ICU to monitor these important signs, even do not drink water, strictly fasting. On the second day, when the condition is stable, the patient can eat, or drink a small amount of rice or semi-fluid food. After removing the drain and changing the dressing, and seeing that there is no fluid leakage or infection in the wound, and the temperature is not feverish, the patient can be encouraged to get up and step on the ground appropriately to see if he can stand up. Only after three days can they get off the ground and walk around. Generally speaking, cranial repair is a relatively small neurosurgical operation, so generally there is no major after-effects of the operation, some accidents are such as easy bleeding after the operation, easy cerebral edema, which is normal. This is normal. Surgery can cause these conditions, which may affect the neurological function, including limb weakness and aphasia, but slowly after symptomatic treatment, if the bleeding is not too much and the edema is not very serious, it can be recovered slowly. So don’t be concerned, they can be treated normally. If dysfunction occurs, we should consider that it may be caused by hydrocephalus, and we can do some drainage after surgery, and if necessary, we can do cerebral shunt surgery to solve the problem of high cranial pressure, which can reduce the functional symptoms. Of course, it is a judgment call, for example, if you see high cranial pressure or outward expansion of the brain before surgery, you can do a shunt first to solve the hydrocephalus problem, and then do the cranial repair.