There are many children with limb deformities, and after orthopedic surgery parents report that their children rebound after a year or two of orthopedic surgery. I wonder why this is? Is it because the child did not have the correct orthopedic surgery? For this reason many parents have doubts about this. So the following we will make a detailed analysis of this issue. The reason why orthopedic surgery for pediatric cerebral palsy limb deformity treatment is very poor? When a child has a limb deformity, we generally think of an orthopedic treatment for the child. But have we ever thought about how this would work if we simply orthopedically treated the child? It’s like a tree that we find is growing crooked. Then we will use a rope to pull it straight and let it grow, and as it grows it will grow straight. But if it grows crooked again in a few years, do we have to pull it again. If you think about it, do you always have to do orthopedic surgery for your child? These are the things we have to consider, let’s say orthopedic surgery, if once or twice is okay. But if many times it is not about money or the child’s physical condition will not allow us to give the child multiple orthopedic. So for this situation we need to think about the root cause, the child limb deformity is caused by muscle spasm phenomenon, muscle tightness for a long time the child’s limbs will produce deformation. This is the main reason for the formation of limb deformities in pediatric cerebral palsy, but how are spasms formed? This involves the issue of muscle tone. If a person’s limb tone is too high, it will lead to muscle stiffness. Myotonia is, frankly, the force of mutual traction between muscles. We have analyzed the relationship between limb deformity and muscle tone above, and we are going to talk about the treatment below. The main treatment for the limb deformities caused by pediatric cerebral palsy is the FSPR procedure, which is a procedure created to decompose spasticity in spastic pediatric cerebral palsy, also called functional selective posterior spinal nerve root dissection. The patient’s muscle tone is reduced, and the force of the muscles pulling on each other is then reduced. However, care must be taken not to let this force disappear completely, as it may lead to flaccid paralysis in the pediatric cerebral palsy patient if it disappears completely. After the patient’s muscle tone is reduced, we then perform orthopedics on the pediatric cerebral palsy patient. In this way, the orthopedic treatment can be solved once, and there will be no rebound in the future. Therefore, it is important to pay attention to the conditions under which the effect is maximized and when the orthopedic treatment can completely hit the root. Both FSPR surgery and orthopedic surgery are not sufficient to restore normalcy to the pediatric cerebral palsy patient. This recovery requires continued scientific rehabilitation to restore the patient to health as soon as possible. This is why many parents find that their child’s orthopedic surgery only lasts a year or two. This is where the root of the problem lies.