The emergence of infant cerebral palsy suddenly plunges an otherwise happy and contented family into an abyss of endless suffering. As far as the current medical technology is concerned, there is no solution to the problem of cerebral palsy, and a child with cerebral palsy becomes a heavy burden for a family forever. The symptoms of cerebral palsy are mental deficiency, epilepsy, limb convulsions, visual, auditory and speech dysfunction, etc. After treatment, it is great if the child can stand on his own. What are the factors that cause cerebral palsy in infants to be so severe? I believe many of us are eager to understand this question. We can divide the causes of infantile cerebral palsy into the following aspects: i. Pre-birth factors, like congenital malformations, genetic defects, in utero infections, pre-eclampsia miscarriage, maternal exposure to toxic substances, radiation damage, gestational hypertension, etc. Second, maternal causes, including maternal abdominal trauma, maternal pre-eclampsia, prenatal hemorrhage, gestational toxemia, and placental causes. Problems during delivery, such as obstructed labor, interruption of umbilical cord blood supply during delivery due to sagging and wrapping around the neck, neonatal asphyxia, huge babies, low birth weight babies, premature immature babies, birth injuries, etc. Postnatal causes, such as nucleus jaundice due to neonatal hyperbilirubin, meningitis, encephalitis or systemic severe infection due to toxic encephalopathy, head trauma, carbon monoxide poisoning, etc. V. Prematurity and fetal dysplasia: intrauterine infection, slow intrauterine growth, congenital malformation, newborn weight less than 2500 grams, which is an important point among the causes of pediatric cerebral palsy. Sixth, the cause of hypoxia, which includes fetal hypoxic asphyxia in the mother’s womb, neonatal hypoxic asphyxia during delivery, whistling distress syndrome, peripheral circulation failure, and erythrocytosis may all be causes of the occurrence of pediatric cerebral palsy. All of these factors are common causes of infant cerebral palsy and may occur singly or concurrently, and there is mostly a cross-correlation between these factors. To avoid cerebral palsy in infants, it is important to avoid these factors as much as possible.