If bladder contraction weakness is diagnosed, treatment is required for long-term chronic rehabilitation. Bladder contraction weakness is most often caused by secondary factors, such as bladder contraction weakness after cerebrovascular lesions, or type 2 diabetes complicated by peripheral neuropathy, resulting in contraction weakness due to dysfunction of the nerves innervating the bladder. For these cases: first, treat the primary disease, such as cerebral hemorrhage and cerebral infarction to treat the primary disease of cerebral hemorrhage and cerebral infarction, give blood circulation and blood stasis treatment, and perform appropriate functional exercises, waiting for the recovery of innervation dysfunction bladder forceps contraction weakness will also be improved appropriately. Secondly, in the case of diabetes mellitus combined with peripheral neuropathy, blood glucose control is the first step of treatment to keep blood glucose in the appropriate range and bladder contraction can be gradually restored after the primary disease is controlled. Finally, primary factors, such as overstretching of the bladder for a longer period of time, resulting in local weakness of contraction, are commonly seen in diseases such as chronic urinary retention, and it is recommended to leave the catheter in place to give the bladder a rest period and remove it after a month or two weeks to observe if the contraction improves.