The main symptoms were dizziness, numbness of the extremities mainly on the right side, unstable walking with a cotton-like sensation and tightness in the chest. A neurological examination revealed no significant abnormalities in the patient’s head, heart and cervical vessels, and a cervical spine MRI indicated C3/4, C4/5, C5/6 and C6/7 disc protrusion with significant spinal cord compression. I went to the consultation to examine the patient’s signs and confirmed the diagnosis of cervical spondylosis, which required surgical treatment to cure. On December 1, I operated on the patient, using an anterior cervical approach with C3/4 and C4/5 disc removal, posterior longitudinal ligament resection + intervertebral fusion implant fusion and subtotal C6 vertebral body resection, C5/6 and C6/7 disc removal + titanium mesh implant fusion with long titanium plate internal fixation. On the first day after surgery, the patient described that the numbness of the limb was gone, and on the third day after surgery, the patient was able to walk on his own without any unsteadiness, and all other preoperative symptoms disappeared. The following is the patient’s data: the upper left picture is the patient’s cervical lateral radiograph before surgery, suggesting C5/6 and C6/7 intervertebral space narrowing and bone redundancy formation at the anterior and posterior edges of the vertebral body; the upper right picture is the preoperative cervical magnetic resonance compression lipid image, suggesting C3/4, C4/5, C5/6 and C6/7 disc protrusion and obvious spinal cord compression; the lower left picture is the patient’s postoperative cervical orthoptic radiograph; the lower right picture is the patient’s postoperative cervical lateral radiograph. Li Zhigang, Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Hubei Provincial Hospital of Integrative Medicine