Cerebral palsy is a common condition with a pretty high incidence. However, many people may have misconceptions about cerebral palsy, or even equate it with brain disability, believing that people with cerebral palsy must be brain-dead and have severe intellectual disability. How long can a person with spastic cerebral palsy live? In fact, most children with cerebral palsy do not have intellectual problems, and their symptoms are mostly manifested in abnormal body posture and limb movement dysfunction, which is the most typical and common type of spastic cerebral palsy. This is the most typical and common form of spastic cerebral palsy. The question of how long a child with spastic cerebral palsy can live is not a concern, as spastic cerebral palsy does not affect life expectancy. However, it should be treated actively because the physical symptoms caused by spastic cerebral palsy are also very torturous, and many children with spastic cerebral palsy are even unable to walk and live on their own, causing great pain and burden to the patient and the family. Therefore, once a child is found to have cerebral palsy, he or she should be treated in time. The earlier the treatment, the less damage will be caused and the better the treatment effect. At present, for spastic cerebral palsy, we adhere to the scientific treatment concept: rehabilitation training – surgical intervention – targeted rehabilitation training – psychological treatment – – return to society. -Return to society. Before the child is three years old, rehabilitation training should be actively carried out to prevent further aggravation of symptoms and prevent tendon contractures and skeletal deformities. If, after the age of three, the effect through rehabilitation training is not obvious, surgical intervention should be actively performed. The main surgical modalities are peripheral nerve narrowing and selective posterior spinal nerve rhizotomy. Through intraoperative myoelectric monitoring techniques, nerve conditioning is precisely implemented with objective data as a guide, and coupled with targeted postoperative rehabilitation training, various limb symptoms are effectively relieved and improved to normalize the function.