Cervical spondylosis, also known as cervical spine syndrome, is a general term for cervical osteoarthritis, proliferative cervicitis, cervical nerve root syndrome and cervical disc prolapse, and is a disorder based on degenerative pathological changes. It is a clinical syndrome with a series of dysfunctions mainly due to long-term cervical spine strain, osteophytes, or disc prolapse and ligament thickening, resulting in compression of the cervical spinal cord, nerve roots or vertebral artery. It manifests as a series of pathological changes in the cervical disc degeneration itself and its secondary effects, such as destabilization and loosening of the vertebral joint, protrusion or prolapse of the nucleus pulposus, bone spur formation, ligamentous hypertrophy and secondary spinal stenosis, etc., which stimulate or compress the adjacent nerve roots, spinal cord, vertebral artery and cervical sympathetic nerve and other tissues, and cause a variety of symptoms and signs of the syndrome. Modern treatment of cervical spondylosis with acupuncture In the late 1970s, with the development of geriatric medicine, this disease only began to receive the attention of the acupuncture community at home and abroad. In less than 20 years, thousands of cases treated with acupuncture have been reported in Chinese medicine and other medical journals in China. A variety of acupoint stimulation methods, such as electroacupuncture, warm acupuncture, intermittent medicine cake moxibustion, bamboo jar method, acupoint laser irradiation, acupoint injection, magnetic acupuncture, beryllium acupuncture, etc. are applied to the treatment of this disease. Overseas, such as Romania, Japan, the United States, the Netherlands, Ireland and other countries also carry out this work. Foreign acupuncturists mostly use milli-needle or electro-acupuncture treatment, and Japanese scholars have also used inter-ginger moxibustion. The main acupuncture point is the neck and shoulder point, but also use the far channel point and the ayurvedic point. According to domestic and international statistics, the efficiency of acupuncture for this disease is about 90%. In order to verify the efficacy, some people observed the effect of warm point on cervical spondylosis by electromyography, and found that as the positive signs disappeared, the fibrillation wave and positive phase wave at rest in electromyography disappeared, the muscle strength of damaged innervated muscles returned to normal, and the motor potential voltage also tended to be normal, which proved that the effect was definite.