Shoulder-hand syndrome is a common complication after stroke. It often occurs when the patient’s shoulder joint and hand are swollen and painful, with limited movement or accompanied by skin color changes. In the early stage, the affected hand is often swollen, with obvious limitation of movement, thickening of fingers, disappearance of skin lines, and pink or purplish color of the skin. The limitation of joint movement is manifested as passive rotation of the hand, limitation of dorsal extension of the wrist, and limitation of the interphalangeal joints when they are in the position of extension and flexion, and pain can be induced by passive activities. If no intervention is made, the affected hand will become a typical deformity in the later stages, and although there is no edema or pain, the joint movement will be permanently lost. Wrist joint, metacarpophalangeal joint activity is obviously limited, forearm rotation is limited, the palm of the hand becomes flat, the size of the interosseous muscle atrophy, so the prevention of shoulder-hand syndrome is quite important, once it occurs, not only to bring pain to the patient, but also to seriously affect the recovery of the function of the upper limb.