Nowadays, there are many parents who worry that their children may have cerebral palsy because of their babies’ “high muscle tone”. Some mothers learn from the Internet that airplane hands, head tilting, and toes touching the ground are the manifestations of cerebral palsy, and find that their babies seem to have these manifestations as well, so they are very tense and anxious, and they go around to seek medical treatment, and they use medicines, injections, and various kinds of treatments, which cause great pain and suffering to their babies. The child suffered a lot. However, I have found that the vast majority of these babies who come to us for counseling are normal. Some are born normally, and some are born prematurely, but they behave normally. This is because the incidence of cerebral palsy in premature babies is only about 3%. For this reason, I would like to tell parents and friends how to recognize the so-called early manifestations of cerebral palsy, such as high muscle tone, airplane hand, head tilt, and toes on the ground? How should we treat these problems correctly in order to avoid causing unnecessary pain and injury to our children? First of all, the most important condition for the diagnosis of cerebral palsy is that there is damage to the brain, and there are lesions of brain damage in the cranial magnetic resonance film. If this child is born normally, discharged from the hospital soon after birth, eats well, sleeps well, and grows and develops normally, he/she will not get cerebral palsy, even if he/she is born prematurely, or a little bit asphyxiated after birth, and there is no obvious brain damage. Now let’s explain the following four manifestations: 1. High muscle tone: when the child is just born, the flexor muscle tone is high, and it will gradually decrease after three or four months. Some of them are because of giving the child exercises, the baby feels uncomfortable and resist, manifested as high muscle tone, but after relaxation, the muscle tone is not high, so it is not really high muscle tone; 2, about the head tilted back, many normal babies, lying down often have the head tilted back, and infants two or three months, the mother also horizontal hold the child, the child is reluctant to, the head is tilted back to show resistance. When the child is held upright, the head is not tilted back, and when the child is held in the sitting position, the head is also well erected. So when lying down with the head tilted back, this is not pathological, it is a normal performance; 3, the so-called airplane hand, is prone, both upper limbs straight, backward, which is often seen in 5 ~ 6 months before the normal baby, this is not pathological, as long as the baby’s hands can reach the front of the baby is not a problem; 4, toes to the ground, we have checked 100 normal babies, from 3 months to 1 year old, of which 23% of the We have checked 100 normal babies from 3 months to 1 year old, 23% of them have toe-toeing, but they can walk very well and do not have cerebral palsy. Diagnosis of Cerebral Palsy The diagnosis of cerebral palsy, in addition to having brain injury, includes the following 4 points: 1. Backward motor development; 2. Abnormalities in muscle tone and posture; 3. Decreased active movements and/or abnormal movements; 4. Abnormal reflexes etc. Parents should never test a normal child for “cerebral palsy” on their own. If the exercises cause muscle tension in the baby, stop doing the exercises, which can promote the baby’s active motor development, and early education to promote the overall development of intelligence.