Parkinson’s disease is a common neurodegenerative disease in middle-aged and elderly people, and it has become a serious health hazard for the elderly after tumors and cardiovascular diseases. The typical manifestations of Parkinson’s disease include motor symptoms and non-motor symptoms. The typical manifestations of motor symptoms can be summarized as “shaking, stiffness and slowness”. Shaking refers to involuntary shaking of the hands, arms or calves; stiffness refers to muscle tightness, feeling stiff, heavy and inflexible when moving the limbs; slow movement refers to slow movement, slow movement in daily life such as dressing, brushing teeth, washing face, etc., writing smaller and smaller, and walking with small steps instead of stepping forward. Non-motor symptoms include loss of smell, rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorders such as nightmares and yelling during sleep, cognitive impairment, insomnia, depression, and hallucinations. Parkinson’s disease treatment methods? Medications such as levodopa and dopamine agonists to supplement the function of dopamine can treat the disease. In the early stages of Parkinson’s disease, medications can be very effective in improving symptoms and are the treatment of choice for people with early Parkinson’s disease. As the disease progresses and is taken over a long period of time, the efficacy of the medications decreases and there may even be complications from the medications, at which point it is necessary to consider DBS brain pacemaker surgical treatment. With the advantages of safe and minimally invasive surgery and modulation, brain pacemaker therapy has been recognized by more and more neurologists in the treatment of functional brain disorders, and more and more patients with Parkinson’s disease are being treated with brain pacemaker therapy. ”If the efficacy of the medication begins to wane, specific drug complications occur after the ‘honeymoon period’ of medication, and the disease begins to get progressively worse, you can consider undergoing brain pacemaker surgery.” The post-operative brain pacemaker allows for optimal stimulation by adjusting the stimulation parameters according to the patient’s changing condition. Currently, pacemakers have been developed to the level of wireless and remote programmable control, allowing patients to receive remote programmable services at home without even going to the hospital, thus greatly reducing the transportation and time costs for patients to travel to and from the hospital for post-operative programmable control.