Cerebral palsy is a painful ordeal for both the child and his or her family, ranging from physical impairment in mild cases to mental retardation, epilepsy, limb twitching, and visual, auditory, and speech dysfunction in severe cases. Therefore, we should pay more attention to babies with these high-risk factors, carefully observe any abnormalities, and go to the hospital regularly for relevant examinations, so as to achieve early detection, diagnosis and treatment of cerebral palsy. Once the brain tissue has been damaged, it is like a disconnected fulcrum, once it is disconnected, it is difficult to be repaired. However, through early treatment, other fulcrums can be improved, so that new channels can be established to replace the original disconnected fulcrums, minimizing the harm of brain injury and allowing the child to grow and develop normally. ” Without early detection, early diagnosis, early rehabilitation treatment and education training, it will lead to lifelong disability in the child. Therefore, it is easy to understand that early diagnosis is necessary for accurate treatment, and early diagnosis is receiving more and more attention at this stage. If an accurate diagnosis is obtained at an early stage, comprehensive rehabilitation treatment for cerebral palsy should be started immediately. There are many ways to treat cerebral palsy, including massage, traditional Chinese medicine, and Chinese acupuncture point injection. Western medicine includes motor therapy, language training, physical therapy, cognitive education and with necessary drugs and surgery. Since cerebral palsy is mainly manifested by limb movement dysfunction, and is often combined with intellectual disability, epilepsy, and in severe cases, even chewing and swallowing disorders, it is a syndrome, so the treatment should take a comprehensive approach. A comprehensive evaluation of the specific case should be conducted during the treatment process, and the treatment must be determined for the specific situation of the child. For example, orthopedic surgery, older ones with secondary disorders, should be done only for children with indications for surgery. The most common type of cerebral palsy in clinical practice is spastic cerebral palsy (about 75% of all children with cerebral palsy), for example, and we will analyze the specific rehabilitation treatment for cerebral palsy. Parents’ active training of the child can help improve the child’s adaptation to the environment. However, it should be noted that as the child grows older, the spastic muscles may not be able to keep pace with the growth of the skeleton, and various progressive deformities may develop. Therefore, early surgical intervention is necessary to avoid the development of deformities and excessive disability, and the delay of surgery due to subjective and objective factors will bring disastrous results to the child! At present, we clinically advocate that children with spastic cerebral palsy should be treated with various modalities of spasticity release surgery around the age of 3. Orthopedic surgery must be performed simultaneously or in stages under the premise of adequate spasticity release; otherwise, the possibility of recurrence, poor long-term efficacy and failure of surgery are inevitable. At the same time, it will make people doubt the efficacy of the surgery and reluctant to accept the surgery, increasing the difficulty of carrying out the work. At present, we advocate the use of FSPR for the treatment of such children: this procedure comprehensively adjusts the patient’s muscle tone by treating the posterior roots of the spinal nerves, so that the muscle tone of the spastic muscles is as close to the normal state as possible, which can achieve a comprehensive adjustment of muscle tone, and can provide a long-term, stable and complete solution to the pain of the patient’s muscle spasm, providing the prerequisite for the maximum recovery of their motor function. In addition, FSPR only selectively blocks part of the posterior nerve root fibers, without affecting the anterior nerve roots and motor functions that govern muscle movement. It is currently one of the most suitable procedures for the treatment of spastic cerebral palsy. It should be noted that we should make a set of scientific and reasonable individualized treatment plan including preoperative evaluation and selection of appropriate methods for each patient before surgery, and we should also insist on long-term formal rehabilitation training after the implementation of FSPR to ensure the rehabilitation efficacy: generally speaking, children should rest in bed within 3 weeks after surgery, and after 3 weeks, they can get up and train with a lumbar support. Training methods include straight-legged too high, hip lift, flip shot, back extension, sitting, standing, walking, squatting and standing, riding tricycles up hills, etc. Those who are able to do so can go to a rehabilitation center under the guidance of a doctor. In addition, parents should also learn some home rehabilitation training methods, such as not holding the spastic child straight, but letting him/her ride on the parent’s leg or waist; padding up both sides of the child’s shoulder blades or letting him/her lie on his/her side when sleeping; taking a position parallel to the child when talking to him/her; feeding him/her from a low position when feeding water, etc., in order to achieve the purpose of suppressing the abnormal posture of the child, so that rehabilitation training can be carried out in the child’s daily life. It is important to remind that cerebral palsy is different from other diseases and the treatment effect cannot be immediate. Parents should not imagine that the disease can be cured by just taking a few times of medicine or doing a few times of surgery. Only scientific and standardized treatment with perseverance can gradually produce results. Therefore, once a child is diagnosed with cerebral palsy, parents should not be pessimistic and disappointed, but should immediately take the child to a regular hospital with conditions for treatment, and should not seek treatment indiscriminately. Persistence is very important in the treatment process. Because cerebral palsy is caused by substantial brain damage, normal physiological functions can only be restored when the damaged brain tissue reaches an activated state. At the same time, during the treatment of cerebral palsy, there is often a “treatment paralysis” phase, where the child is likely to be less responsive than before receiving treatment. In fact, this temporary paralysis is often a prelude to the culmination of treatment, and the effects of treatment will be evident after this phase. Therefore, parents of children should be prepared for this and persevere, and not give up halfway.