MRI of the neck is a more general concept, but it is actually more detailed when doing examinations when diagnosing lesions. MRI of the neck usually refers to soft tissue MRI of the neck, which mainly examines soft tissue lesions in the neck, such as inflammation and tumors, and most often looks at the lymph nodes in the neck. The lymph node tissue in the neck is very rich and malignant tumors can easily metastasize in the lymph nodes. Observing whether there are enlarged lymph nodes in the neck can determine whether various malignant tumors have lymph node metastasis, such as nasopharyngeal carcinoma, thyroid cancer, laryngeal cancer, etc., which first appear in the lymph node metastasis in the neck. If enlarged lymph nodes in the neck are found, further examination of the primary lesion is needed, and early diagnosis and early treatment can improve the cure rate. Of course, the scanning method is different for various parts of the lesions in the specific examination, and the scanning conditions are also different. MRI is a large field of view scan, so it can also roughly see various lesions in the cervical spine. Of course, cervical spine lesions need to be used again with cervical spine specific scanning conditions and scanning methods to clearly show various cervical spine lesions, such as osteophytes, disc lesions, and spinal cord injuries, edema, inflammation, tumors, etc. To diagnose spinal cord lesions, cervical spine MRI must be done.