The majority of patients with Parkinson’s disease develop between the ages of 50 and 60, with more men than women. The onset of Parkinson’s disease is insidious and the development of symptoms is slow, starting in one upper extremity and gradually spreading to the ipsilateral lower extremity or (and) the contralateral upper and lower extremity. Most patients have tremor or dyskinesia for several months or even years before it is noticed. The main clinical manifestations are resting tremor, muscle tonicity, reduced movement and postural abnormalities (four main signs). Not all patients with Parkinson’s disease have this symptom. The typical tremor is mainly in the distal part of the limb, usually starting from one hand, and as the disease progresses, the contralateral limb, head and neck, lower collar, mouth and lips, and tongue can appear. In the early stages, the tremor is mostly noticeable during quiet time and usually does not interfere with normal movements and behaviors, while in the later stages it appears during quiet movements. Severe tremor causes patients to lose the ability to write and eat. 2. Myotonia can be commonly understood as muscle stiffness, which doctors call increased muscle tone. The increased muscle tone caused by Parkinson’s disease is different from the increased muscle tone caused by hemiplegia or paraplegia, and is characterized by increased muscle tone in both the extensor and flexor muscles, with the flexor muscles being more pronounced. Muscle tone may cause the patient to turn, stand up, unbutton, and other daily movements to become slower and more difficult. Dull facial expressions, difficulty swallowing and salivation, monotonous and slow speech, and small and repetitive voices. 3. Decreased movement and abnormal posture Decreased movement (less movement): dull expression, less blinking, drooling, patients are slow in various active movements in daily life, such as dressing, buttoning, brushing teeth, washing face, tying shoelaces, etc., often sitting still; writing becomes smaller and smaller, and speech is low and monotonous; later there may be swallowing difficulties, salivation, choking and coughing when eating. Abnormal posture and balance: Due to the tonicity of the limbs, trunk and neck muscles, patients develop special postures, head, neck and trunk leaning forward when standing, hunching and stooping, elbow and knee joints in different degrees of flexion; side-bending posture (one high and one low shoulder), unstable posture because of the patient’s impaired ability to adjust the orientation of the body and limbs. Balance disorders are a serious problem in patients with Parkinson’s disease. The upper limbs are accompanied by reduced or absent movements. Walking faster and faster, inability to stop suddenly, difficulty in turning. 4, easily ignored symptom group Parkinson’s disease other manifestations: including salivation, seborrhea, excessive sweating, constipation, slurred speech, sleep disorders, anxiety, depression, depressed mood, swallowing difficulties, wasting, lower limb twitching, breathing difficulties, urinary urgency, decreased sense of smell, and symptoms of autonomic disorders such as hypoactive sexual desire, phlegm, upright hypotension. However, the disease generally does not involve the rectal and bladder sphincter muscles and does not cause loss of bowel control. Most of the intellectual and emotional responses are normal.