Cerebral cysticercosis is a stubborn intracranial disease transmitted by parasites, mainly pork and tapeworms. This disease accounts for more than 80% of cysticercosis and is due to oral ingestion of pork, tapeworm eggs, which develop into cysticercus larvae that penetrate the intestinal wall through the digestive tract, enter the small mesenteric veins, and then reach the meninges, brain parenchyma, and intracerebral ventricles through the body circulation; it is divided into parenchymal, ventricular, cerebral models, and mixed types. After this disease infects brain tissue and brain, it leads to serious brain damage, headache, weakness, limb movement disorder, and the most serious can be secondary to epilepsy, blurred vision, and even blindness.