“…Thus, surgery in the octogenarian must take into account a number of factors, such as lack of synchronism between physiological age and chronological age, quality of life, risk/benefit ratio and increase in health care costs, an element that is gaining more and more importance [7,19,23,25]. The issue has been settled for other surgical pathologies such as hip fractures [10] or cardiac valve replacement [12]. Secondly, more and more people aged over 80, at greater risk of ground-level falls, have upper cervical spine injuries [19].…”