Irregular-motion cerebral palsy is the most difficult type of cerebral palsy children to treat. Children often show clinical manifestations such as random movement disorder, twisting spasm, bilateral postural asymmetry and orofacial dysfunction, etc. If not detected and treated with early intervention, the degree of self-care is poor, which brings serious consequences to individuals and families. With early detection, early diagnosis and early treatment, some children can be completely cured, or at least improve their life skills. The following are some of the early manifestations of involuntary movement cerebral palsy. If you find that your child has such symptoms, you should go to a specialist in time. 1.Neonatal period: feeding difficulties, often spitting up or overflowing milk, no crying or continuous crying, frowning, sleeping difficulties, preferring to hold the position; easily frightened. 2.1–3 months: easy to be frightened, abnormal crying, feeding difficulties, slow weight gain, brief pursuit of vision, poor head-eye coordination, habitual twisting of the face to one side, head tilted back (obvious when tense) or head and neck too soft, inability to lift the head in prone position or excessive lateral head lifting, hip flexion, hip elevation; thumb inward, hand clenched fist, upper limb internal rotation and back extension; asymmetric bilateral posture in supine position, abnormal stirring of both lower limbs, pulling up Coracoacromial anteversion. 3, 4 – 6 months: head and neck can not be neutral position, head-eye, head-eye-hand coordination is poor, open mouth, tongue, can not laugh loudly, strange expression, grasp objects posture abnormal, trunk control ability is poor, can not maintain sitting posture, can not turn over, sensitive to stimulation; supine position asymmetric, “bridge-like pull up”, prone position neutral position head lifting difficulties, support standing The position is “sword-like” posture or dance-like.