Delay โ permanent bladder dysfunction.
1. Earliest sensitive indicator of cauda equina syndrome?
A. Saddle anesthesia
B. Bilateral sciatica
C. Urinary retention with โ PVR
D. Loss of ankle jerk
Post-void residual >100โ200 mL is the earliest reliable marker.
2. Massive central L4โL5 disc compresses mainly:
A. L4 root
B. Traversing L5 & sacral roots
C. Conus medullaris
D. Dorsal columns
Central herniation affects descending cauda roots (L5, S1 predominant).
3. Reflex pattern in pure cauda equina lesion:
A. Hyperreflexia
B. Clonus
C. Segmental areflexia
D. Babinski positive
It is a lower motor neuron lesion โ hyporeflexia/areflexia.
4. Feature favoring cauda equina over conus lesion:
A. Early bladder involvement
B. Symmetric weakness
C. Bilateral Babinski
D. Severe radicular pain
Radicular pain & asymmetry favor cauda equina.
5. Saddle anesthesia corresponds to:
A. L1โL2
B. S2โS4
C. L5โS1
D. T12โL1
Perianal sensation mediated by S2โS4 roots.
6. Most common etiology overall:
A. Massive lumbar disc herniation
B. Multiple sclerosis
C. Syringomyelia
D. Vertebral artery infarct
Large central disc prolapse is the commonest cause.
7. Ankle jerk corresponds primarily to:
A. S1
B. L3
C. L1
D. T12
S1 root mediates Achilles reflex.
8. Gold standard diagnostic modality:
A. CT myelogram
B. X-ray spine
C. EMG
D. MRI lumbosacral spine
MRI visualizes compressive pathology and neural elements.
9. Bladder dysfunction mechanism:
A. UMN spastic bladder
B. Atonic LMN bladder
C. Detrusor hyperreflexia
D. Pontine lesion
S2โS4 parasympathetic loss โ flaccid retention.
10. Ideal decompression timing for best recovery:
A. Within 24โ48 hours
B. Within 7 days
C. After conservative therapy
D. Only if motor deficit worsens
Early decompression improves bladder outcome.
11. Bilateral extensor plantar response suggests:
A. Cauda equina
B. Peripheral neuropathy
C. Conus/cord involvement
D. Radiculopathy
Babinski = UMN sign โ not pure cauda equina.
12. Sensory loss pattern is typically:
A. Hemisensory
B. Dissociated
C. Level-defined
D. Patchy radicular
Multiple root involvement โ patchy dermatomal loss.
13. Most reliable bedside test for S2โS4 motor function?
A. Anal tone assessment
B. Plantar reflex
C. Knee jerk
D. Cremasteric reflex
Anal sphincter tone directly assesses S2โS4 integrity.
14. Overflow incontinence in cauda equina is due to:
A. Detrusor hyperreflexia
B. Atonic bladder with retention
C. Internal sphincter spasm
D. Pontine lesion
LMN bladder causes retention โ overflow leakage.
15. Which tumor most classically causes cauda equina syndrome?
A. Meningioma
B. Astrocytoma
C. Hemangioblastoma
D. Myxopapillary ependymoma
Myxopapillary ependymoma commonly arises in filum terminale.
16. EMG finding in chronic cauda equina lesion:
A. Normal motor units
B. Myopathic potentials
C. Fibrillation potentials
D. Conduction block
Denervation produces fibrillations and positive sharp waves.
17. Erectile dysfunction occurs due to damage of:
A. Parasympathetic S2โS4 fibers
B. T12 sympathetic fibers
C. Pudendal sensory only
D. Femoral nerve
Erection mediated by parasympathetic S2โS4 roots.
18. Most common reflex lost first:
A. Knee jerk
B. Ankle jerk
C. Biceps reflex
D. Jaw jerk
S1 involvement โ early loss of Achilles reflex.
19. Bilateral sciatica indicates involvement of:
A. Single nerve root
B. Conus only
C. Multiple lumbosacral roots
D. Dorsal columns
Sciatica bilaterally implies multi-root compression.
20. Most predictive factor for poor bladder recovery:
A. Age >60
B. Bilateral weakness
C. Saddle anesthesia duration
D. Retention >48 hours
Prolonged retention damages detrusor irreversibly.
21. Preferred surgical procedure in disc-related CES:
A. Laminectomy with discectomy
B. Spinal fusion only
C. Conservative therapy
D. Radiotherapy
Urgent decompression via laminectomy + disc removal.
22. Arachnoiditis-related CES typically shows:
A. Disc extrusion
B. Clumped nerve roots on MRI
C. Vertebral collapse
D. Syrinx formation
MRI shows nerve root clumping & empty thecal sac sign.
23. Sensory loss in CES spares:
A. Perianal region
B. Posterior thigh
C. Trunk above L1
D. Lateral foot
Lesion is below cord termination.
24. Most important immediate step after suspicion:
A. Start steroids
B. Bladder training
C. Physiotherapy
D. Emergency MRI
MRI confirmation guides urgent decompression.
25. Cauda equina lesion is anatomically:
A. Peripheral nerve root lesion
B. UMN lesion
C. Brainstem lesion
D. Cortical lesion
Roots are peripheral nervous system structures.
26. Typical motor pattern:
A. Spastic paralysis
B. Flaccid paralysis
C. Rigidity
D. Decorticate posture
LMN lesion โ flaccidity & atrophy.
27. Most common dermatome involved in large L5โS1 disc:
A. L2
B. L3
C. S1
D. T12
S1 radiculopathy common in L5โS1 prolapse.
28. Loss of bulbocavernosus reflex indicates damage to:
A. L1
B. T12
C. L4
D. S2โS4
Bulbocavernosus reflex mediated by S2โS4.
29. Key differentiating feature from peripheral neuropathy:
A. Severe radicular back pain
B. Stocking-glove pattern
C. Symmetric distal loss
D. No sphincter involvement
Radicular pain with saddle anesthesia favors CES.
30. Best prognostic motor outcome is seen when:
A. Surgery delayed >72 hrs
B. Decompression done early
C. Only steroids used
D. Conservative care chosen
Early decompression yields best neurological recovery.