Typical case of a child with spastic cerebral palsy

  Cerebral palsy is a relatively common condition that affects many children. Some children walk with crossed legs (also known as scissor stance), some children cannot land on their heels, some children have inwardly clasped thumbs and flexed elbows, and so on. This is the most common and typical type of cerebral palsy and is called spastic cerebral palsy.  There are many parents who want to know about cases of children with spastic cerebral palsy being cured. In fact, children with cerebral palsy cannot be completely cured, and the damage to the brain is usually irreversible. The treatment of cerebral palsy itself is not about treating and restoring the brain injury and damage that has already occurred, but rather about treating the external symptoms that the child exhibits (like limb movement disorders, speech disorders, salivation, strabismus, etc.) to improve and alleviate the symptoms and strive for normalization of function.  Of course, there are many cases of children with spastic cerebral palsy recovering from their symptoms, and most of them can be cured by the right method. In reality, many children with spastic cerebral palsy are not cured mainly because they did not find the right method. Most of them are treated in local hospitals simply through rehabilitation training, and they may see the effect during the process, but once they stop, it is easy to rebound. In fact, in this case, surgical treatment should be actively sought.  Spastic cerebral palsy is mainly caused by brain injury resulting in weakened inhibition of nerve signals and increased muscle tone in the extremities, resulting in muscle spasms and various abnormal limb symptoms. Therefore, it can be cured by peripheral nerve narrowing. Peripheral nerve narrowing, under myoelectric monitoring, precisely removes certain nerve tissues and weakens nerve signals, it can reduce muscle tone and well relieve the muscle spasm state, with exact and significant effect.