The motor symptoms of Parkinson’s disease manifest as limb tremor, rigidity, slow movement, postural balance disorder, etc.; it also has non-motor symptoms, such as limb pain, constipation, involuntary sweating, intractable insomnia, anxiety, depression, etc., which make the patients suffer a lot and increase the burden of the family. For Parkinson’s disease, most patients just take oral medication or do home rehabilitation training, and the treatment lacks systematic. Functional neurologists believe that Parkinson’s disease requires a comprehensive treatment strategy, i.e., different treatments should be chosen at different stages of the disease. First of all, for the early stage of the disease or drug “honeymoon period” patients, that is, 3 to 5 years after the disease, if the symptoms affect the work and life, should be in the functional neurologist under the guidance of the regular medication, starting from a small amount, and gradually increase the amount of or combined medication; during this period, should be done to professional rehabilitation training, to maximize the extension of the honeymoon period of the drug. For Parkinson’s patients who have passed the drug “honeymoon”, if physical and economic conditions allow, should actively seek surgical treatment. Radiofrequency ablation and DBS are the main treatments. Radiofrequency ablation, the principle of treatment is to use radiofrequency electric current to destroy the function of abnormal excitation of neural nuclei in the brain, such as the pallidum or thalamus ventral-lateral nucleus. The procedure is performed under local anesthesia by installing a stereotactic head frame, doing MRI and CT localization of the head, and computerized data on the location of the neuronal nuclei are given. Under local anesthesia, a 3-cm scalp incision was made in the patient’s head, a 5-mm bone hole was drilled, and electrodes were inserted to verify that the electrodes accurately entered the nucleus accurately, and then radiofrequency ablation was performed. This procedure is used for patients with unilateral limb symptoms or bilateral symptoms predominantly on one side, especially for the treatment of limb tremor and stiffness, but the function of the nucleus pulposus is not recoverable after treatment. “DBS” or brain pacemaker therapy, the device includes an intracerebral stimulation electrode, a subcutaneous lead, a pulse generator and an extracorporeal control switch. The stimulation electrode is 1.2mm in diameter, and the chest subcutaneous pulse generator is 6×6×0.5cm3 in size, which sends out high-frequency pulse current to inhibit abnormal excitation of neuronal nuclei, thus playing a therapeutic role. The procedure is similar to radiofrequency ablation, except that there is an additional process of installing the subcutaneous pulse generator, and the DBS devices are buried under the skin. The procedure is mainly used to treat bilateral symptoms at one time, requiring multiple adjustments of stimulation parameters outside the body, and the function of the nucleus pulposus can be restored after the machine is turned off. The future treatment is stem cell therapy, which is now in clinical trials, with proven safety and validity yet to be verified by further studies of large numbers of cases. In conclusion, functional neurologists believe that Parkinson’s disease requires a comprehensive treatment strategy and regular hospitalization for evaluation, and only then can patients achieve better outcomes.