As people gain a more comprehensive understanding of disease treatment, rehabilitation training plays an increasingly important role in the overall treatment process.
How can the body return to normal as quickly as possible? The key is early exercise! After surgery, the body's immune system mounts a massive immune response. If this response persists, it can cause multiple organ dysfunction. To restore these protective immune systems to normalcy as quickly as possible, patients must undergo rehabilitation as soon as possible. One of the goals of rehabilitation is to minimize the burden on their families and society.

- Rehabilitation training can significantly restore a patient's physical strength. Simple skeletal muscle exercises and aerobic training can significantly restore physical function and improve their immune system.
- Exercise can boost a patient's confidence in overcoming the disease, which has both physiological and psychological therapeutic effects on the disease itself.
- It can significantly improve the function of certain joints and motor functions, especially after surgeries on the hands, joints, and spine. Early postoperative functional training is crucial for restoring the function of the surgical organs.
Therefore, post-operative rehabilitation training must be initiated early and carried out gradually under the guidance of a doctor to achieve optimal results.

Importance
- Improving Limb Movement:
Rehabilitation training can help patients regain limb movement, including muscle strength, joint range of motion, and balance. Targeted training can improve walking ability, self-care skills, and quality of life.
- Improving Language and Cognitive Function:
For patients with language disorders and cognitive decline, rehabilitation training can provide targeted speech therapy and cognitive training to help restore language expression and comprehension, improving cognitive function.
- Preventing Complications:
Patients who are bedridden for long periods or have limited limb movement are prone to complications such as lung infections and deep vein thrombosis. Rehabilitation training can help patients maintain adequate exercise and prevent the occurrence of complications.
- Enhancing Self-Confidence and Self-Care: Through rehabilitation training, patients can gradually regain some functional abilities, improve their ability to care for themselves, enhance their self-confidence, reduce their dependence on others, and better integrate into society and their families.
- Promote brain plasticity:
The brain possesses a certain degree of plasticity, meaning its structure and function can change through learning and training. Rehabilitation training can leverage this plasticity to promote brain reorganization and repair, thereby enhancing rehabilitation outcomes.
- Improve quality of life: The ultimate goal is to help patients regain as much function as possible and improve their quality of life. Rehabilitation training can help patients better adapt to daily life, participate in social activities, and enjoy a more fulfilling life.