Patient: Description of the condition (onset time, main symptoms, hospital, etc.): Male, 48 years old, this time in the hospital for DDR examination, the examination saw: cervical physiological curvature straightened, part of the hook vertebral joints become pointed, C4 ~ 7 vertebral body posterior edge osteophytes become pointed, bilateral 2nd and 3rd intervertebral foramen deformation, become smaller, each cervical space is not seen to become narrow, the attachment structure is clear, the diagnosis is cervical degenerative changes None Please tell me how to How should I treat it? Is it serious? What medicine should I take? Xu Bin, Department of Orthopedics, General Hospital of Nanjing Military Region: Cervical degenerative changes are a normal physiological change that gradually changes as a person ages after maturity, and if this change exceeds a certain degree, abnormalities will occur and nerve compression may occur. Of course, with cervical spondylosis there must be symptoms consistent with this, and if the symptoms are not consistent with this can not be said to have this disease. What you have just described is a cervical spine osteophyte, and I don’t know what symptoms this proliferation has brought you, but if there are no symptoms, you can’t be said to have cervical spondylosis.