It often happens in clinical practice that patients have back pain, lack of energy and always want to sleep. There are many clinical conditions that can cause this phenomenon. First of all, if a patient has non-infectious osteochondritis, the patient may feel back pain, weakness, and sleepiness, along with peripheral aches and pains. If the patient has spinal cord cervical spondylosis, due to osteophytes at the posterior edge of the vertebral body and ossification of the ligaments, the spinal cord is compressed and the nerve roots are stimulated, resulting in back pain, weakness and sleepiness. It is also accompanied by weakness of the limbs and symptoms of nerve damage such as loss of skin sensation and tingling. If the patient suffers from neurogenic or vertebral artery cervical spondylosis, this phenomenon will also occur. Due to the stimulation of the vertebral artery, the blood supply to the brain is affected and the patient will suffer from low back pain, weakness and sleepiness, accompanied by symptoms such as vertigo, nausea and vomiting.