From the current medical point of view, timely treatment of children with cerebral palsy can maximize the stimulation of damaged brain cells and give the child the best treatment results. The younger the age, the greater the repairability of the damaged brain cells. If early treatment is missed, recovery for these children is more difficult. For children with cerebral palsy, early rehabilitation is the greatest guarantee of recovery, and to do this, the first step is to do a good job of early diagnosis. We must understand some basic symptoms of children with cerebral palsy and do a good scientific screening work carefully. 1. unresponsiveness and unresponsiveness to name calling This is the early manifestation of mental retardation. It is generally believed that unresponsiveness to name calling at 4 months and unresponsiveness to name calling at 6 months can be diagnosed as mental retardation. Abnormal head circumference: Head circumference is an objective indicator of morphological development of the brain, and brain-injured children often have abnormal head circumference. Poor weight gain and nursing weakness. 2. Body tenderness and reduced spontaneous movements This is a symptom of hypotonia, and this manifestation can be seen at one month. If it persists for more than 4 months, it can be diagnosed as severe brain injury, mental retardation or muscular system disorders. Stiffness of the body, which is a symptom of hypertonia, can be seen at the age of one month. If it persists for more than 4 months, cerebral palsy can be diagnosed. 3. Fixed posture Often, this is due to abnormal muscle tone caused by brain injury, such as coracobrachialis, frog position, inverted U-shaped posture, etc. It can be seen in the first month after birth. Not smiling: If you cannot smile at 2 months and laugh out loud at 4 months, you can be diagnosed with mental retardation. Hand clenching: If the hand cannot be opened at 4 months, or the thumb is inward, especially if present on one upper limb, there is a significant diagnostic significance. Body twisting: 3-4 months old infants with body twisting often suggest an extraconal injury. 4. Head instability: Inability to raise the head when prone or to hold the head upright when sitting at 4 months of age is often an important sign of brain injury. Strabismus: 3-4 months old infants with strabismus and poor eye movement can indicate the presence of brain injury. Inability to reach and grasp objects: If the infant is unable to reach and grasp objects at 4-5 months of age, the diagnosis may be mental retardation or cerebral palsy. Attention to hand: persistence after 6 months of age may be considered as mental retardation. Some brain injuries are milder and often have no obvious symptoms in early infancy, but in the second half of infancy. With these symptoms above can effectively help us to detect pediatric cerebral palsy early so that the best time for rehabilitation treatment can be obtained. In the early rehabilitation of children with cerebral palsy, more motor training should be carried out, following a set of scientific and systematic way, which can be divided into active activities and passive massage and stretching, and must be gradual and persistent for a long time. The rehabilitation teacher and parents must patiently teach the child to sit, stand, walk and hold things according to different ages. If the child has a “scissor step”, we should be careful to keep the legs apart and propped up during sleep. The most scientific treatment for cerebral palsy is the principle of rehabilitation → FSPR surgery → cerebral palsy muscle tone adjustment → rehabilitation, especially for spastic cerebral palsy, which has the highest incidence. A one-sided emphasis on how miraculous a certain method is, or how the application of a certain technique will bring a once-and-for-all effect, is not objective and scientific. If the child’s limbs have been in a state of curl for a long time, causing contractures that cannot be pulled, or if persistent limb spasms prevent training, surgical treatment must be performed between the ages of 2.5 and 6, such as FSPR (Functional Selective Spinal Nerve Posterior Root Dissection) to selectively release spastic muscles, scientifically reduce excessive muscle tone, and lay a good foundation for subsequent rehabilitation. Of course, post-operative rehabilitation must not be interrupted, and we must not neglect the psychological rehabilitation of children with cerebral palsy, so that they can further build up their confidence to overcome the disease. As a reminder, the treatment of cerebral palsy is a long-term and arduous task, and it is impossible to see the child fully recovered within a short period of time, which causes many children and their parents to slowly lose confidence in the treatment or even give up halfway.