Common Risk Factors of Bone Spurs in the Neck

As the cartilage cushioning the ends of your bone are broken down by osteoarthritis, your body, with the help of the white blood cells, attempts to repair the loss by creating bone spurs near the damaged area. Lifestyle can also be a factor that contributes to the events of a bone spur in the body. For example, if your daily job involves you carrying a load on your head, thereby impacting too much pressure on your neck joint, it can cause bone spur.
Specific risk factors for bone spurs in the neck may include:
- Car accident, or other accidents causing whiplash
- History of sports injuries that affected the neck
- Heredity
- Overuse injuries, especially from desk jobs
- Diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis (DISH) spine
- Ankylosing spondylitis











