“…[ 1 2 14 ] Our further evaluations of craniovertebral junction-related issues conclude that atlantoaxial instability is the basis of a number of musculoskeletal abnormalities, such as basilar invagination, bone fusions or Klippel-Feil abnormality, assimilation of atlas, C2-3 fusion, bifid posterior arch of atlas, platybasia, short neck, and torticollis, as well as neural abnormalities, such as Chiari formation and syringomyelia, when they are present in conjunction or in isolation. [ 33 34 35 36 37 ] The observation has significant clinical relevance and suggests the need for atlantoaxial fixation in all the mentioned clinical entities and futility of foramen magnum decompression surgery as the mode of surgical treatment. As we identified decrease in the size of syrinx and reversal of tonsillar herniation, we identified reversal of musculoskeletal changes of basilar invagination that begins in the immediate postoperative period following atlantoaxial fixation.…”