INTRODUCTION: The clinical condition was described as In recent personal observations, protection by ossification was recorded in a severe trauma case and in vertebrae weakened by malignant infiltration. METHODS: A phylogenetic review of the animal world, followed by an ontogenetic study of mammals/ humans, could assist in a decision regarding the nature (physio-or pathological) of the hyperostosis. RESULTS: The phylogenetic lineage on one side showed the oldest record of hyperostosis in dinosaur (144 million years ago=mya). Ossifications were found in the anterior, lateral, posterior longitudinal ligaments, in C1-C2 transverse ligament. In the other phylogenetic, Hyperostosis was in historic and contemporary mammals. The next step in this study is in the ontogenetic line of the Humans. The oldest skeleton (Ethiopia, 4.5 mya) showed “bridged vertebrae“. The first definite hyperostosis was in the Shanidar skeleton (Iraq, 40–12,000 BCE) with “flowing osteophytes”. In the historic Humans since 9500 BCE, hyperostosis was found in Europeans, Egyptians, Indians (Chile) and Incas. In the Christian era, hyperostosis was present in Roman-British/Celt populations, Franks, Saxons, British, Swiss and N. Americans. In the 20th C, it is pandemic. DISCUSSION: (a) (b (c)
-Tracheal compression with laryngeal nerve palsy; -Esophageal compression with endoscopic implications. ( Dorsal syndromes: painful ankylosis, spinal stenosis &
myelopathy ( Lumbar syndromes: painful hyperlordotic ankylosis, spinal stenosis ( Sacroiliac fusion ( Extra spinal calcifications: peri articular at elbow, hips and in operative scars: Achilles’ repair; Post-laparatomy abdominal wall ossification ( Particular features: early onset (age 40); incidence in families with two brothers and another with three brothers.