After an anterior cervical discectomy, immobility at the fused level may increase stress on adjacent disc spaces and causes disc degeneration in 92% of the cases with clinical manifestations in 25.6% of the patients within 10 years. The cervical disk prosthesis may help to prevent this problem. The Bryan prosthesis (Medtronic Sofamor Danek) is currently available in France after a European pilot study.Since January 2002, 8 patients (9 implants) (mean age: 35 years) were operated on with a prosthesis implantation for disc degeneration after an adjacent previous interbody fusion in 2 patients and for disc herniation or spondylosis in 6 patients. The prosthesis were implanted at the C4-C5 level (one patient), C5-C6 (four patients), and C6-C7 (four patients). Post-operative radiological evaluations with dynamic X-rays and clinical status (Odom questionnaire) were analyzed.Surgical procedures, which were longer than the classical technique, were uneventful. Radicular pain resolved after surgery with excellent results with the Odom's score. With a mean follow-up of 12 months, the prosthesis mobility was 8.9 degrees . But one fusion of an implant was encountered 6 months after implantation.The general follow-up for the Bryan(R) cervical disc prosthesis implantation is still too short (2 years) for a definitive evaluation. If clinical results on pain are as good as expected, long-term mobility of the prosthesis has to be checked, as it is the main advantage over classical anterior cervical discectomy with fusion. Patient selection has to be considered.