Cerebral palsy is a syndrome of non-progressive central nervous system disorders that result in motor and postural disorders. Brain nerve damage is irreversible and nerve cells cannot regenerate after necrosis, so cerebral palsy cannot be cured. Syndromic diseases that can cause mainly damage to the above motor neurons can lead to cerebral palsy. Prematurity is one of the most common causes. Prematurity is not an external damage to the central nervous system, but rather the immaturity of the brain at birth, resulting in a central motor disorder. There is also neonatal asphyxia, which can also lead to severe hypoxia in the brain and cause organic damage, and even if oxygen supply is restored, it can still cause severe symptoms because the brain cells are not regenerable. There is also jaundice after the birth of the child, which causes kernicterus and produces bilirubin encephalopathy, which can also cause cerebral palsy. A viral infection of the mother during pregnancy, which causes a developmental disorder in the child, can also cause cerebral palsy.