What is mixed cerebral palsy?

  How to improve the motor stability of children with involuntary movement cerebral palsy? The weakness of children with non-random-motion cerebral palsy is their poor stability, so we should combine active and passive training with weight-bearing training. If the child can cooperate, the therapist should verbally instruct him/her to control the stability of the body, and the effect of active movement is much better than that of passive movement. For example, “ball hugging” training can effectively control the abnormal posture of ATNR, and then add weight training to improve muscle strength and help control the abnormal posture.  What are the abnormal gait patterns when walking alone in non-random motion cerebral palsy? How to correct it? When walking alone, children with non-random-motion cerebral palsy have poor head control, little or no midline activity, no or little midline activity in the upper limbs, and poor trunk stability, while the stability of the medullary joints and lower limbs is better than that of the upper limbs and trunk. The child may also have some oral-facial dyskinesia. The root of correcting abnormal posture in children with involuntary movement cerebral palsy is to control the posture and enhance stability, such as the child’s own conscious control, or increase the load to indirectly improve the stability of the child, or control the child in a smaller area and let him/her move in this area to control the posture.