If a patient has a herniated cervical disc in 5-6 segments, he or she can be diagnosed as suffering from cervical spondylosis. The judgment of the severity of the degree depends on the degree of herniation and the clinical performance of the patient, for example, if a patient has a herniated cervical disc in 5-6 segments, he or she only feels pain in the neck and has slightly restricted neck movement without obvious symptoms of nerve compression, which is not a serious cervical spondylosis clinically. If the patient has neck pain and obvious radioactive stabbing pain or electric shock-like pain in bilateral shoulders and upper limbs, as well as loss of skin sensation, numbness and weakness, impaired finger dexterity, and the feeling of stepping on cotton pile when walking or muscle weakness in the limbs, it is a more serious cervical spondylosis, and the correct symptomatic treatment should be taken in clinical practice.