The cause of hypertonia is organic disease, such as cogwheel-like or leadpipe hypertonia, which is usually an extrapyramidal lesion, most often seen in Parkinson’s disease or Parkinson’s syndrome. If there is no combination of resting tremor, the patient has lead tube-like hypertonia, and the combination of tremor is cogwheel-like hypertonia. These diseases are chronic, progressively aggravated and will not resolve on their own, and will only get worse with age. In the case of fracture-like hypertonia, it is often seen in the sequelae of various cerebrovascular diseases or traumatic brain injury, where the patient has a definite brain injury, resulting in spastic paralysis of the upper and lower extremities, producing fracture-like hypertonia, and the symptoms will persist, and after treatment, the symptoms can be slightly improved, but will not be completely relieved. For example, dobutamine and pramipexole can be used for Parkinson’s, and baclofen and cloxacin can be used for fracture-like hypertonia.