“…Less commonly, pyrophosphate tophaceous deposits have been observed around peripheral joints and in the spine, including the intervertebral disc, posterior longitudinal ligament, facet joints, ligamentum flavum, and sacroiliac joint (7)(8)(9). In the cervical spine, calcified deposits in the ligamentum flavum, facet joints, lateral masses, and posterior longitudinal and atlantoccipital ligaments can be associated with signs of spinal stenosis, meningismus, and cervical myelopathy (9,10).…”