Question
As of now, I have completed the fourth treatment (single somatotropin and Liraglutide), and had a rehabilitation session on October 9th (but the child’s legs and hands are relatively normal; the doctor said that after the rehabilitation, the child’s ability to hold up their head is like that of a one-and-a-half-month-old, should I continue with the treatments?
Answer
Early symptoms include newborns or three-month-old infants being easily startled, crying incessantly, refusing to breastfeed, and difficulty sleeping. Early feeding, eating, chewing, drinking, and swallowing are difficult, along with drooling and breathing difficulties. Cerebral palsy is not an incurable disease; if diagnosed early and treated early, except for extremely severe cases, it can be cured or normalized. This is a viewpoint repeatedly elaborated by experts at the National Early Diagnosis and Comprehensive Rehabilitation Conference for Pediatric Cerebral Palsy. Cerebral palsy (abbreviated as CP) is non-progressive brain damage caused by various reasons from before birth to one month after birth.