The method of anesthesia for Parkinson’s patients varies according to the patient’s condition and a reasonable method of anesthesia is chosen. Nausea and vomiting rarely occur after local anesthesia, and oral medication can be resumed very quickly. Local anesthesia is preferable to general anesthesia because general anesthesia requires the use of general anesthetic drugs that mask tremor paralysis and also neuromuscular blocking drugs, when there is the possibility of drug interactions that may aggravate the patient’s condition. Patients who must be under general anesthesia should choose the drugs for general anesthesia rationally, and levodopa can be given postoperatively via the gastric tube. General anesthesia combined with subdural anesthesia should be used in patients undergoing surgery below the thorax and abdomen to reduce the amount of intraoperative general anesthetic drugs. Copper complex can theoretically enhance sympathetic responsiveness and is therefore contraindicated in patients with Parkinson’s disease.