What kind of surgery do people with cerebral palsy use? How?

At present, comprehensive rehabilitation is advocated in the treatment of cerebral palsy, i.e. a combination of surgical treatment, rehabilitation training and other forms of treatment, to help the patient to improve his or her abnormalities as far as possible, to help him or her to achieve a better life and even to return to society in part.

Many parents with cerebral palsy ask the same question in their consultations: Doctor, what’s the point of surgery when the cerebral palsy cannot be cured?

Professor Chongwang described the physical abnormalities of persons with cerebral palsy, which, although not yet effective, can help to restore normal brain tissues to the extent possible through rehabilitation and help to reduce the gap between patients and normal children, all of which cannot be separated from surgical interventions.

So, what are the types of surgery that people with cerebral palsy use? For what kind of patient?

1 – FSPR (functional selective vertebrate neurological dissociation), adapted to convulsive cerebral palsy, paraplegic, convulsive paraplegic, partially convulsive patients whose muscle tension is above the third level, seriously affecting the normal life of the patient. For patients over 2.5 years of age.

The purpose of the operation is to overhaul the force tension and to provide a long-term, stable and thorough solution to the pain of a patient ‘ s muscle spasm and to provide a precondition for the resumption of motor functions.

2, SPN surgery (selective neurological constriction), adapted to a single patient with limited local convulsions, or to a patient with high local muscle tension following the FSPR operation or the FSPR. Suitable for patients over 1 year of age.

The purpose of the operation is to improve the body ‘ s ability to move by removing excess muscle tension and retaining its original muscle tension and motor function.

3, CP-MMA (the brain paralysis muscle tension adjustment technique), adapted to patients who are regulated by an exterior motor system in cases of irreversible malformations due to abnormal muscle tension and severe loss of muscle.

The purpose of the operation is to deform the joints and to have a soft tissue convulsion and orthopaedic.

4 – CPS surgery (breathing of the general artery exterior of the neck on both sides), adapted to patients with a hand-and-foot motion and a partial reversal of convulsions (relay muscle tension disorder, retrovertation convulsions, convulsions, slashed neck, etc.). Suitable for patients over 1 year of age.

The purpose of the operation is: to improve the supply of blood to the patient ‘ s brain, to improve the functioning, memory and speech of the brain; to reduce the muscle tension (especially upper limbs) of the body; and to mitigate the symptoms of a person with cerebral palsy with lack of mouth, inflexibility, inflexibility and saliva.

The first functional neurosurgery in the country, Professor Chongwang, has created an integrated whole-course treatment programme, Gradient Therapy, with a phased approach of multidisciplinary experts, such as + FSPR surgery + professional rehabilitation + 2 orthopaedic + orthotic supports, to achieve a perfect treatment.

The advantages of the `graduary therapy’:

The first step is to develop individualized treatment programmes, based on the patient ‘ s pathology, age, symptoms and multidisciplinary specialists, with a view to maximizing rehabilitation opportunities for each patient.

Step 2: Effectively shorten the rehabilitation cycle, for surgical patients. Surgeons work with rehabilitation doctors throughout the process to develop reasonable surgical programmes and individualized rehabilitation programmes, reducing the length of rehabilitation by two to five years.

Step three: Gradient treatment, which saves treatment costs and improves the efficacy of treatment; it avoids duplication of treatment and the unreasonableness of the sequence of treatment, compensates for residual problems in each treatment, and systematically plans the treatment programme through a combination of different treatments to ensure the best possible recovery for each patient.

Step four: Multidisciplinary collaboration, protection for all sick. Integration of the multidisciplinary advantages of functional neurosurgery, osteoporosis, imaging, paediatrics, rehabilitation, anaesthesia, psychopsychiatrics, etc., to ensure that patients receive regular medical assistance throughout their path.