Cervical retroversion is the imaging description. In the normal human body, the cervical spine has a forward convex physiologic curvature. The forward-convex curvature of the cervical spine occurs due to the presence of neck muscle pulling during the body’s upright position and the interaction of the associated intervertebral joints of the cervical spine. In patients with cervical spondylosis, prolonged sitting and standing with the head down may cause the curvature of the cervical spine to straighten or even produce a backward curvature, a condition known as cervical lordosis. Patients with cervical lordosis will have a series of degenerative changes in the cervical spine, which may include muscle spasms on both sides of the cervical spine, osteophytes in the cervical spine, ligamentous hypertrophy and calcification of the cervical spine, or herniation of the cervical intervertebral disc. Patients with these pathological changes may have a series of symptoms such as neck pain, stiffness, unfavorable movement, rattling, radiating pain and numbness in the upper limbs.