In the fall and winter, due to the rapid change of temperature, large temperature difference, dry climate and other reasons, people are prone to various diseases, and these diseases may also become the cause of many geriatric diseases. Parkinson’s disease is one of the most common of these diseases. Parkinson’s disease is not as serious as tumors, but it can lead to some complications, such as fractures after a fall due to lack of mobility in old age, pneumonia, respiratory infections, etc. Parkinson’s disease is not seasonal. Parkinson’s disease itself has no seasonal difference, but for Parkinson’s disease patients themselves have different symptoms in different seasons. Some patients have a harder time in summer because they sweat easily in summer, and their symptoms are more severe because of their vegetative nerve disorder and their inability to tolerate heat. But after the fall and winter appear new problems, the fall is drier, this patient itself will be constipated, the symptoms will be more serious, need to be adjusted in the diet. Entering winter is a more difficult season for Parkinson’s disease patients, because winter is prone to respiratory infections and inflammation of the lungs, the resistance of the elderly is relatively poor, coupled with the winter, wearing more clothes, Parkinson’s disease patients themselves are not very active, more clothes will be even more inconvenient, so the chance of falling is even greater. In the course of daily visits, we often encounter Parkinson’s patients or their families ask whether it can be cured. Even many patients and their families blindly believe in some false advertisements, Chinese medicine cure and other information, which is precisely caused by the lack of knowledge about the disease, and have also encountered many patients who have missed the best time for treatment because of blindly believing in false therapies. Indeed, there is no cure for Parkinson’s. Many patients take medication for a period of time before they can be cured. After taking the medication for a period of time, many patients will experience a gradual decrease in the efficacy of the medication and an increase in the amount of medication taken; some patients will also experience “involuntary movements, i.e., anisotropy” (movements of the body that cannot be controlled by the body) and “on-off” cyclic medication changes, which are side effects. These side effects can be very disruptive to Parkinson’s patients in the middle to late stages of the disease. Neurosurgical brain pacemaker therapy can alleviate the symptoms of Parkinson’s disease, and even relieve some symptoms completely. The main surgical procedure is Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS), also known as a “pacemaker”. The principle of DBS is to inhibit the abnormal activity of brain cells, and the implanted stimulator delivers electrical impulses to the relevant nerve nuclei that control movement to improve symptoms. The treatment has been around for nearly 30 years, and more than 130,000 patients worldwide have been treated with the pacemaker. This method is reversible, adjustable, safe and minimally invasive, and can significantly improve the symptoms of bradykinesia, dyskinesia, muscle stiffness and/or tremor in Parkinson’s patients, as well as significantly reduce the side effects of medication. The vast majority of patients who receive deep brain electrical stimulation therapy have overall improvement in their motor symptoms, improved quality of life, and are able to return to work; their caregivers can also be relieved from heavy caregiving work and create more social value. A study published in 2013 by the New England Journal of Medicine, the world’s leading medical journal, showed that patients who received early pacemaker therapy significantly outperformed patients treated with medication alone in terms of quality of life and motor function, among other clinical indicators. Therefore, we encourage the majority of Parkinson’s patients and their families, once diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, patients should face the reality, adjust the mentality, and be ready to “fight a long-lasting war”, do not be discouraged, do not be afraid of, Parkinson’s disease has long been not an “incurable disease”, as long as Parkinson’s disease is no longer an incurable disease, as long as you insist on receiving scientific, reasonable and standardized treatment under the guidance of your doctor, most Parkinson’s disease patients can get significant improvement in their symptoms and have a quality of life similar to that of ordinary people for a long period of time.