Whether a patient with cerebral infarction can undergo surgery with anesthesia is determined by the stage of cerebral infarction. If a patient has an acute cerebral infarction and the disease duration is only 5-7 days, it is not suitable for anesthesia to perform surgery at this time. Because after anesthesia, some patients will have blood volume changes, blood pressure and heart rate changes, which will cause abnormal blood flow and cerebral infarction or transient cerebral ischemia attack, and in the acute stage of cerebral infarction, the condition is not completely stable, it is not possible to do surgery with anesthesia. If the patient is in the recovery period of cerebral infarction and the condition is more stable, it is possible to do surgery with anesthesia at this time if local anesthesia is the mainstay. The patient’s state should be evaluated before the operation, such as whether there is any instability of blood pressure, whether there is any instability of heart condition, and whether there is any abnormality of breathing, so the basic condition of the patient should be evaluated as a whole when doing anesthesia surgery in the recovery period of cerebral infarction.