How Is a Cerebral Palsy Diagnosis Made? Tests and Evaluation Explained
If you suspect your child has cerebral palsy — or if a doctor has already raised the possibility — you probably want to know what happens next and how the diagnosis actually gets confirmed. This guide explains the whole process in plain language: who is involved, what tests are done, why it can take time, and what comes after a confirmed diagnosis.
The most important thing to understand first
There is no single test that diagnoses cerebral palsy.
Cerebral palsy is a clinical diagnosis — meaning it is made by a specialist based on the full picture: a child’s movement patterns, developmental history, neurological examination findings, and imaging results. No blood test, genetic test, or scan can confirm CP on its own. This is why the process takes time and why it involves multiple types of assessment.
This can feel frustrating for families who want a clear answer quickly. Understanding why the process works this way — and what each step is looking for — can help make the experience less uncertain.
Who makes the diagnosis
A cerebral palsy diagnosis is typically confirmed by a paediatric neurologist — a specialist in neurological conditions in children. This is not usually the first doctor who raises the concern.
The typical referral pathway looks like this:
- A GP, general paediatrician, health visitor, or nurse notices or is told about movement concerns — missed milestones, unusual muscle tone, asymmetric movement — and refers the family for specialist assessment
- A neonatologist (newborn specialist) may be the first to flag risk in premature babies or babies who experienced oxygen deprivation around birth, based on brain imaging done in the neonatal unit
- A paediatric neurologist conducts the specialist evaluation and confirms the diagnosis
- Additional input may come from developmental paediatricians, physiotherapists, and radiologists reviewing imaging
In many healthcare systems, the referral process takes time and families may wait weeks or months between raising a concern and seeing the right specialist. Starting physiotherapy during this waiting period — based on the clinical concern, before any confirmed diagnosis — is appropriate and strongly recommended.
The diagnostic process, step by step
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1
Medical history and developmental review
The specialist will ask detailed questions about the pregnancy, delivery, and early neonatal period — including whether the baby was premature, whether there were complications during labour, whether the baby needed resuscitation, and what the APGAR scores were. A complete developmental history is also taken: when did the baby first smile, roll, sit, stand? What concerns has the family noticed and when?
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2
Neurological examination
The paediatric neurologist will examine the child directly, assessing muscle tone (are muscles too stiff or too floppy?), reflexes (are primitive reflexes persisting beyond the expected age?), movement quality (is it symmetrical? Does it look qualitatively normal?), posture, and the child’s response to handling and movement.
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3
Standardised movement and developmental assessments
Several validated tools exist to assess movement quality and developmental status in a standardised way. These help distinguish between children at high, moderate, and lower risk of CP, and track changes over time. Key tools include the General Movement Assessment (GMA) for infants, and the Hammersmith Infant Neurological Examination (HINE).
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Brain imaging
MRI of the brain is recommended for most children with suspected CP, and reveals an underlying brain abnormality in around 80–90% of cases. In premature babies, cranial ultrasound is often performed in the neonatal period and may already show relevant findings. MRI provides much more detail but usually requires sedation or anaesthesia in young children and is therefore scheduled when the child is old enough and ready.
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Additional investigations where needed
Depending on what the history and examination show, additional tests may include: EEG (to assess for epilepsy, which affects around 30–50% of children with CP); genetic testing (when the MRI is normal or when the clinical picture is atypical); metabolic testing (to rule out conditions that can mimic CP); and vision and hearing assessments (as sensory impairments are common in CP and affect the overall developmental picture).
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Diagnosis and classification
When the clinical picture is clear enough, the neurologist confirms the diagnosis and classifies it — by motor type (spastic, dyskinetic, ataxic, or mixed), by distribution (hemiplegia, diplegia, quadriplegia), and by functional level using validated classification systems such as the Gross Motor Function Classification System (GMFCS). This classification directly informs the treatment plan.
The tests explained
MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging)
The gold standard. Shows brain structure in detail — identifies the type, location, and likely timing of the brain injury. Abnormal in 80–90% of CP cases. Cannot rule out CP if normal.
Cranial ultrasound
Used in premature or at-risk newborns — performed through the fontanelle (soft spot). Identifies major haemorrhages and white matter injury early, without radiation or sedation.
General Movement Assessment (GMA)
Observational tool for infants 0–5 months. Assesses the quality of spontaneous whole-body movement. Absence of “fidgety movements” at 3–5 months is a strong early CP predictor (sensitivity ~98%).
Hammersmith Infant Neurological Examination (HINE)
Structured neurological examination for infants 2–24 months. Scores cranial nerve function, posture, movements, tone, and reflexes. Scores below a threshold predict high likelihood of CP.
GMFCS (Gross Motor Function Classification System)
Five-level scale (I = walks without limitations; V = moved in a manual wheelchair) describing functional mobility. Guides treatment planning and predicts likely functional outcomes.
EEG, genetic & metabolic testing
EEG assesses for epilepsy. Genetic testing is considered when MRI is normal. Metabolic tests rule out progressive conditions. Vision and hearing assessments complete the picture.
Why diagnosis often takes time — and why that is not a reason to wait
One of the most frustrating aspects of the CP diagnostic process for families is that it often does not produce a definitive answer quickly. There are real clinical reasons for this.
First, the effects of a brain injury on movement development become clearer as a baby grows and fails to meet milestones — so a diagnosis made at 12 months is inherently more certain than one made at 3 months, simply because more developmental information is available. A cautious clinician may want to observe over time before committing to a diagnosis that will stay with a child for life.
Second, some forms of CP — particularly mild spastic hemiplegia — may not produce obvious abnormalities in early infancy. The clearest signs emerge when the child begins to use their hands and legs for purposeful activities.
Third, the availability of specialist assessments, MRI facilities, and experienced paediatric neurologists varies significantly by country and region.
The critical message for families: Do not wait for a confirmed diagnosis before starting therapy. Early physiotherapy is appropriate, safe, and beneficial for any child with motor concerns — regardless of whether a formal diagnosis has been confirmed. The first two years of life represent the window of greatest neuroplasticity. Every week of early, targeted therapy that is delayed while waiting for diagnostic certainty is a week that cannot be recovered.
What happens after a cerebral palsy diagnosis
A diagnosis is not the end of a process — it is the beginning of access to the specific help your child needs. Here is what should typically follow a confirmed diagnosis.
Remember: The GMFCS level assigned at diagnosis is not fixed. Children who receive early, intensive, and appropriate treatment — particularly those who have spasticity-reducing surgery followed by intensive rehabilitation — frequently achieve functional levels that were not predicted at the time of diagnosis. Classification is a snapshot in time, not a ceiling.
Your child has been diagnosed — or you are still waiting. Either way, we can help you understand what treatment options exist.
Request a free remote evaluation →Frequently asked questions
What tests are used to diagnose cerebral palsy?
There is no single test for CP. Diagnosis combines: medical history; clinical neurological examination; standardised movement assessments (GMA, HINE); brain MRI (abnormal in 80–90% of CP cases); and additional tests as needed — EEG for epilepsy, genetic testing when MRI is normal, and vision and hearing assessments.
At what age is cerebral palsy diagnosed?
A formal diagnosis is usually confirmed between 12 and 24 months. In severe cases with visible neonatal brain injury, early monitoring begins in the neonatal period. In mild cases — particularly mild spastic hemiplegia — diagnosis may not come until age 3 to 5. New tools like the GMA allow earlier risk identification from as young as 3 to 5 months.
Is MRI always needed to diagnose cerebral palsy?
MRI is the recommended gold standard and is performed in most cases. It identifies a brain abnormality in about 80–90% of CP patients. However, a normal MRI does not rule out CP — around 10–20% of children with a clinical diagnosis of CP have no visible abnormality on standard MRI. In these cases, diagnosis rests on the clinical assessment and developmental history.
Who diagnoses cerebral palsy?
Cerebral palsy is typically confirmed by a paediatric neurologist. The process usually begins when a GP, general paediatrician, or health visitor notices abnormal movement or missed milestones and refers the family for specialist assessment. Neonatologists may be first to raise concern in at-risk newborns.
Can cerebral palsy be diagnosed at birth?
Usually not, even when brain injury is visible on neonatal imaging. The effects on movement become clearer as the baby develops and fails to meet milestones. However, babies with identified risk factors can be placed on early monitoring and intervention pathways from the neonatal period, without waiting for a formal diagnosis.
What is the General Movement Assessment (GMA)?
The GMA is a standardised observational tool for infants from birth to approximately 5 months. It assesses the quality of spontaneous whole-body movements. Absence of “fidgety movements” at 3–5 months is one of the strongest early predictors of CP, with around 98% sensitivity for detecting major neurological disorders when combined with other assessments.
Should I start treatment before a CP diagnosis is confirmed?
Yes — this is one of the most important messages for parents. Early physiotherapy is safe, appropriate, and beneficial for any infant with motor concerns, whether or not a formal diagnosis has been confirmed. Waiting for diagnostic certainty before starting therapy is one of the most common and most avoidable delays in CP care.
What happens after a cerebral palsy diagnosis?
After confirmed diagnosis: the child is classified by functional level (GMFCS, MACS); physiotherapy, occupational therapy, and speech therapy are initiated; orthotics are assessed; and a longer-term treatment plan is developed — including assessment for surgical intervention from age 2 when spasticity is confirmed. A diagnosis is the starting point for accessing specific help, not an end point.
References
- Novak I, et al. (2017). “Early, Accurate Diagnosis and Early Intervention in Cerebral Palsy.” JAMA Pediatrics. PubMed ↗
- Einspieler C, et al. (2016). “The General Movement Assessment helps identify preterm infants at risk.” Frontiers in Psychology. PubMed ↗
- Rosenbaum P, et al. (2007). “The definition and classification of cerebral palsy.” Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology. PubMed ↗
- Morgan C, et al. (2016). “Early intervention for children aged 0–2 years with or at high risk of cerebral palsy.” Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology. PubMed ↗
- Surveillance of Cerebral Palsy in Europe (SCPE). “Prevalence and characteristics of children with cerebral palsy in Europe.” PubMed ↗