Generally speaking, there are different treatments for children with cerebral palsy at different stages of development. For children with spastic cerebral palsy, we can consider FSPR surgery (Functional Selective Spinal Nerve Posterior Root Dissection) after the age of 2.5 years, which can be a good solution to the problem of the child’s inability to walk on his or her feet. It should be reminded that FSPR for cerebral palsy is different from early SPR surgery and from general orthopedic surgery. After the FSPR surgery, the spasticity of the foot is immediately released and the problem of high muscle tone is immediately solved, and the ideal treatment effect can be expected through a period of systematic rehabilitation. In addition, it should be emphasized that the treatment of all types of cerebral palsy, including spastic cerebral palsy, must adhere to the principle of combining surgery and rehabilitation, and follow a scientific treatment pathway of “rehabilitation training->FSPR surgery->myotonia adjustment->rehabilitation training”. Clinical practice has long proven that it is not objective and scientific to emphasize one-sidedly how a certain method is miraculous or how the application of a certain technique will bring a once-and-for-all effect. As a reminder, spastic cerebral palsy is the most common type of cerebral palsy, characterized by hyperactive extensor reflexes, low birth weight infants and those with a history of birth asphyxia. Cerebral palsy is usually caused by birth anomalies, mostly with speech and motor impairments, and some children with mental retardation. About 70% of children with cerebral palsy only have problems with their feet or walking, but the rest have normal intelligence. These people belong to the spastic type of cerebral palsy, which is manifested by symptoms such as inability to land completely on the heel, tiptoe and scissor step. At present, the medical profession still advocates that cerebral palsy patients should be treated within 6 months of birth in order for them to reach a normal level, but we have found that nearly eight of them come for treatment after the age of one, which greatly affects the future treatment results. We would like to remind parents of infants with “difficult birth, premature birth, hypoxia, jaundice” to be more vigilant and to seek medical attention as soon as they find abnormal symptoms in their children so that they can receive medical treatment as soon as possible. It should be noted that cerebral palsy treatment is a long-term systematic project, and surgery should be carried out on the basis of rehabilitation training at an appropriate time, and surgery must be closely integrated with rehabilitation training. In other words, in addition to targeted surgical treatment for cerebral palsy, rehabilitation training is also an essential task, and early rehabilitation is also crucial. Because the type of cerebral palsy in children with cerebral palsy is still unstable within 3 years of age, and there is a possibility that the symptoms will improve through rehabilitation, and because they are too young to withstand the trauma of surgery, they can achieve functional improvement with the help of rehabilitation training at this time.