Now after the retirement age has been postponed, many workers in their fifties are still in the workforce, and if they are farmers, they may still be raising their families in their fifties and not be able to afford the disease. Parkinson’s disease is a disease that is highly prevalent in middle and old age, with an average age of 55 years, insidious onset, slow progression, and mainly affects the motor function of the limbs. If the hands and feet are not at your disposal, how can you work to support yourself and your family, which is a very painful thing to do? The only way is to adjust your attitude, actively treat your condition, establish your own disease file from the beginning, find the right specialist, and record the changes in your condition and treatment from the beginning of taking medication. Scientific treatment can effectively improve symptoms and reduce pain. Patients with Parkinson’s disease will gradually progress and worsen with time. In the early stages of the disease, patients taking a certain dose of medication can control the symptoms and their lives are not greatly affected by the treatment. As the disease progresses, the patient’s body becomes more resistant to the medication, and the effect of medication gradually decreases and improves poorly. Some patients may also develop motor complications, switch phenomenon and isokinetic disorder, which are very painful. At this time, many patients and their families will look to surgical treatment. The earliest surgical treatment for Parkinson’s disease dates back to the late 19th century, when some doctors treated Parkinson’s disease tremor by removing part of the cerebral cortex, the results were not satisfactory and the surgery led to serious complications. Since then, a number of doctors have tried to treat Parkinson’s disease with partial severance of the vertebral fasciculus, and pedunculotomy of the brain. Although these methods can improve symptoms such as tremor and muscle stiffness, the complications that come with them are equally serious. In 1953, Dr. Cooper accidentally discovered that pallid disruption surgery could significantly improve the symptoms of Parkinson’s disease during a chance surgical error, but the high mortality rate resulting from its direct operation remained difficult to accept. It was not until the introduction of levodopa in the 1960s that its widespread use worldwide led to a significant reduction in the number of surgical treatments for Parkinson’s disease. However, less than 10 years after the use of levodopa, its drug-induced adverse effects, especially abnormal involuntary movements, became widely publicized, and it was found that there were no effective drugs to control such adverse effects, at which point surgical treatment was re-emphasized and re-evaluated. After the advent of surgical treatment with a brain pacemaker, disfigurement therapy was rarely done. Disfigurement is a permanently destructive procedure that can only be done unilaterally, not bilaterally, and patients with Parkinson’s disease are basically bilaterally symptomatic. For long-term consideration, many patients also choose brain pacemakers, which can be done unilaterally or bilaterally. The surgery can effectively control symptoms for many years, and disease progression is not to be feared, and the parameter values can be adjusted at any time to regain control, with the advantageous features of no nerve damage, reversible and adjustable, and developable. Of course, some patients will choose one side of the destruction surgery and one side of the deep brain electrical stimulation according to their economic situation is also possible. There are many patients who have undergone destruction in their early years and can also consider a brain pacemaker to select a suitable target location.