Patients who experience dizziness when their heads are lowered and lifted may have vertebral artery cervical spondylosis. Because the patient’s neck is in forward flexion when the head is lowered, the process of tilting the head back can cause stimulation and compression of the vertebral arteries bilaterally, reducing the blood supply to the head and causing the patient to experience dizziness. Patients with muscle strain in the neck, resulting in increased pressure in the neck muscles, may also compress the vertebral arteries, affecting the patient’s blood supply to the brain and causing dizziness. When this phenomenon occurs, the patient needs to reduce head and neck activities, wear a neck brace, brace, and use acupuncture, moxibustion, and hot compresses in the neck to relax the blood vessels in the neck, reduce the pressure on the vertebral artery, and improve the blood supply to the brain, which can relieve the dizziness.