Title of the manuscript: Atypical symptoms in patients with cervical spondylosis might be the result of stimulation on the dura mater and spinal cord

Patients with cervical spondylosis often present with some atypical symptoms such as vertigo, headache, palpitation, nausea, abdominal discomfort, tinnitus and blurred vision and hypomnesia. Although there are a few hypotheses about the etiology of those symptoms, none of them have provided evidence convincing enough to explain the clinical, pathological and anatomic manifestation of those symptoms. One of the more acceptable explanations is that those symptoms are the results of stimulation of the sympathetic nerves in the posterior longitudinal ligament.
Source: Medical Hypotheses - Category: Biomedical Science Authors: Source Type: research