The symptoms of cervical spondylosis are very rich, diverse and complex, and most patients start with mild symptoms that gradually worsen later, while some have more severe symptoms. This is related to the type of cervical spondylosis suffered, but there are often few simple types, with one type dominating and one to several types mixed together, called mixed cervical spondylosis, so that the symptoms are very rich, diverse and complex. Its main symptoms are head, neck, shoulder, back and arm pain, neck stiffness and limited movement. The neck and shoulder pain can be radiated to the head and occipital region and upper limbs, some are accompanied by dizziness, house rotation, heavy cases with nausea and vomiting, bedridden, and a few can have vertigo and sudden collapse. Some have fever on one side of the face and sometimes abnormal sweating. There is a feeling of heaviness in the back of the shoulder, weakness in the upper limbs, numbness in the fingers, loss of sensation in the skin of the limbs, weakness in holding objects in the hands, and sometimes unconscious gripping of objects to the ground. Other patients have weakness in the lower limbs, unstable walking, numbness in the second foot, and a feeling like stepping on cotton when walking. When cervical spondylosis involves sympathetic nerves, dizziness, headache, blurred vision, swelling of the second eye, dryness, inability to open the second eye, tinnitus, ear blockage, loss of balance, tachycardia, panic, tight c feeling in the chest, some even have symptoms such as gastrointestinal distention. A few people experience loss of control of bowel movements and urination, sexual dysfunction, and even tetraplegia. There are also symptoms such as dysphagia and dysphonia. These symptoms are related to the degree of onset, the duration of onset, and the individual’s physical condition. Most of the symptoms are mild at the onset and are not taken seriously, most of them can recover on their own, sometimes light and sometimes heavy. If the disease remains untreated for a long time, it can cause psychological damage and produce symptoms such as insomnia, irritability, anger, anxiety, and depression.