Infants may exhibit symptoms such as unsteady walking, falling, unclear speech, drooling, dull gaze, clenched fists, a preference for solitude, slow growth, and lower intelligence. Doctors diagnose it as pediatric cerebral palsy. How to treat pediatric cerebral palsy? It is a non-progressive disease that improves with age, but limbs and language can deform and regress if not attended to. The best approach is to attend school and undergo rehabilitation training to promote physical and language development.
Pediatric cerebral palsy is a central nervous system motor disorder that requires detailed evaluation of the condition and the development of personalized treatment plans. Moderate neurological nutritional medication treatment for children under 3 years old, timely recovery, and timely surgical intervention for children with cerebral palsy aged 3-6 years are crucial for good prognosis, especially for the most common spastic form.