Abstract

Atmaram bone (C2 axis vertebra) is usually handed over to the family of the deceased on the next day after cremation during the ''Asthi sanchaya '' commemoration. ''Asthi visarajan'' involves the practice of immersing the bones and ashes of the deceased in the Holy Ganges river as per Hindu beliefs. Atmaram bone, which usually does not burn during cremation, is handed over to the family of the departed (asthi sanchaya) after cremation which is then immersed in the holy Ganges river ( asthi visarajan). Atma means soul, Ram means Lord and Atmaram combined means the one who is Lord of his own soul." Worshiping of Lord Shiva (while living) and Asthi sanchaya-Asthi visarajan (of the departed) are two religious venerations in Hinduism. Atmaram bone was handed over to me for immersion in the holy Ganges on November 6, 2020, after conducting the asthi sanchaya of my mother during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. Atmaram bone looked like a Shivalinga statue to most who looked at it, whereas it resembled the image of the axis vertebrae (C2 vertebra) to me when I saw it that sacred day. Atmaram bone, the Shivalinga, and the C2 axis vertebra are among the most precious and sacred objects that humans can handle as relatives, as devotees, and as neurosurgeons, respectively. Asclepius, possibly a skilled war surgeon/neurosurgeon, was worshipped at Asclepieia. Trephination surgery in neurosurgery and religion are intertwined historically. Though there is no published literature, neurosurgeons in various parts of the world do offer religious prayers prior to major neurosurgical operations. In line with the religious veneration of worshipping Shiva Ling or immersion of bones of the departed soul in the Holy Ganges river, we believe it is the sacred responsibility of the operating neurosurgeon to perform surgery in complex craniovertebral junction. As neurosurgeons, we cannot ignore the axis in the living, the odontoid fracture in the injured, and the Atmaram in the deceased.

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