Foot Drop

What is Foot Drop?

Foot drop is a condition in which a person has difficulty lifting the front portion of the foot while walking. As a result, the toes may drag on the ground, causing an abnormal gait and increasing the risk of falls.

Foot drop is a symptom rather than a disease and often indicates nerve, spinal, or brain-related dysfunction.

Common Causes

  • Lumbar disc prolapse
  • Peroneal nerve injury
  • Spinal stenosis
  • Stroke
  • Multiple sclerosis
  • Motor neuron disease
  • Peripheral neuropathy 

How is it Diagnosed?

Doctors assess:

  • Muscle strength
  • Walking pattern
  • Reflexes
  • Sensory changes 

Investigations

  • MRI Lumbar Spine
  • Nerve Conduction Studies
  • Electromyography (EMG)
  • MRI Brain
  • Blood tests 

Treatment Options

  • Physiotherapy
  • Ankle-foot orthosis (AFO)
  • Treatment of underlying cause
  • Nerve decompression surgery
  • Spine surgery when indicated 

When Should You Consult a Doctor?

Immediately if symptoms appear suddenly or worsen progressively.

Red Flags

  • Sudden onset
  • Progressive weakness
  • Back pain with leg weakness
  • Bladder dysfunction 

FAQs

Is foot drop permanent?

Not always. Recovery depends on the cause and timing of treatment.

Can a slipped disc cause foot drop?

Yes. Severe nerve compression is a common cause.

Does foot drop require surgery?

Some patients require surgery, while others improve with conservative treatment.

When to Consult

Foot drop may indicate significant nerve compression and should be evaluated promptly by a neurology or spine specialist.

Bladder Dysfunction

What is Bladder Dysfunction?

Bladder dysfunction includes difficulty passing urine, urinary retention, urgency, or loss of bladder control.

Common Causes

  • Spinal cord compression
  • Cauda equina syndrome
  • Multiple sclerosis
  • Stroke
  • Neurological disorders 

Investigations

  • MRI Spine
  • Urodynamic studies
  • Neurological examination 

Treatment Options

  • Emergency decompression when required
  • Medications
  • Rehabilitation 

Red Flags

  • Sudden urinary retention
  • Back pain
  • Leg weakness
  • Saddle numbness 

FAQs

Can spinal disorders affect bladder control?

Yes.

Is bladder dysfunction an emergency?

It can be.

When should I seek medical attention?

Immediately if symptoms occur suddenly.

When to Consult

Bladder dysfunction associated with back pain or weakness requires urgent medical evaluation.

Saddle Numbness — Cauda Equina Syndrome (Neurological Emergency)

What is Saddle Numbness?

Saddle numbness (perianal / perineal anesthesia) refers to sensory loss in the perineum, inner thighs, buttocks, and genital region — the anatomical areas that would contact a saddle. This symptom is the hallmark of cauda equina syndrome (CES), a rare but potentially devastating neurological emergency resulting from severe compression of the cauda equina nerve roots (L2–S5) at or below the conus medullaris.

Without timely surgical decompression, CES can result in permanent paralysis, loss of bladder and bowel control, and sexual dysfunction. Outcome is closely related to speed of diagnosis and intervention.

Critical Timing Evidence: Surgical decompression should ideally be performed within 24–48 hours of symptom onset to maximize recovery of neurological function. Bladder dysfunction (urinary retention) is the most commonly reported presenting symptom and, when present, requires emergency MRI within 1 hour of presentation to the emergency department.

 

PRIMARY: Barraclough K. Cauda equina syndrome. BMJ. 2021;372:n32. doi:10.1136/bmj.n32 — Comprehensive review with management algorithm.

PRIMARY: British Association of Spinal Surgeons / SBNS. Standards of Care for Investigation and Management of Cauda Equina Syndrome. 2019. — Mandates emergency MRI within 1 hour for suspected CES.

SUPPORTING: Todd NV. Cauda equina syndrome: the timing of surgery probably does influence outcome. Br J Neurosurg. 2005;19(4):301–306. [PMID: 16455564]

SUPPORTING: Pace-Patterson AM, et al. Soft Tissue Extramedullary Plasmacytoma Leading to Cauda Equina Syndrome. Cureus. 2021;13(3):e14056. doi:10.7759/cureus.14056

Common Causes

  • Large central lumbar disc herniation (most common; typically L4/5 or L5/S1)
  • Severe lumbar spinal stenosis
  • Spinal tumors (primary or metastatic)
  • Spinal trauma with bone retropulsion
  • Spinal epidural hematoma or abscess
  • Cauda equina compression post-spinal procedure

Clinical Features of Cauda Equina Syndrome

  • Saddle anesthesia (perianal / perineal sensory loss)
  • Bladder dysfunction: urinary retention (most common), incontinence, or altered stream
  • Bowel dysfunction: decreased rectal tone, incontinence, constipation
  • Bilateral lower extremity weakness or asymmetric weakness
  • Lower extremity sensory changes (numbness, tingling)
  • Sexual dysfunction
  • Reduced or absent lower limb reflexes (lower motor neuron pattern)
  • Low back pain (often severe) with or without radicular leg pain

Investigations

  • Emergency MRI Lumbar Spine (within 1 hour of presentation — British Association of Spinal Surgeons standard)
  • CT Lumbar Spine (if MRI unavailable or contraindicated)
  • Neurological examination
  • Urological assessment (post-void residual ultrasound)

Plain X-rays are NOT adequate for diagnosing cauda equina syndrome. MRI is mandatory.

Management

  • Emergency surgical decompression (ideally within 24–48 hours of symptom onset)
  • Neurosurgical or spinal surgical consultation immediately
  • Post-operative neurological rehabilitation
  • Continence therapy and management

🔴 RED FLAGS — Seek Emergency Care Immediately

• SADDLE NUMBNESS is a NEUROLOGICAL EMERGENCY

• Urinary retention or incontinence with back pain

• Loss of bowel control

• Progressive bilateral leg weakness

• Severe acute low back pain with any of the above

• Sexual dysfunction with any of the above

• → IMMEDIATE EMERGENCY MRI REQUIRED — do not delay

Neck Stiffness

Clinical Overview

Neck stiffness (cervical rigidity) refers to reduced range of motion in the cervical spine, typically due to pain, muscle spasm, inflammation, or structural injury. It is a common post-traumatic finding but also an important clinical sign in non-traumatic neurological emergencies. In the context of fever and headache, neck stiffness (nuchal rigidity) is a cardinal sign of meningeal irritation, as seen in meningitis.

Common Causes

  • Muscle strain
  • Whiplash injury
  • Cervical spine fracture or dislocation
  • Cervical disc prolapse
  • Ligament injury
  • Meningitis (nuchal rigidity)
  • Cervical spondylosis
  • Arthritis

Investigations

  • Cervical Spine X-ray (AP, lateral, odontoid views)
  • CT Cervical Spine (mandatory post-trauma if fracture suspected)
  • MRI Cervical Spine (for disc, cord, and ligamentous assessment)
  • Neurological examination

🔴 RED FLAGS — Seek Emergency Care Immediately

• Limb weakness or paralysis

• Numbness in hands or feet

• Difficulty walking or balance problems

• Bladder or bowel dysfunction

• High-velocity trauma mechanism

• Fever with neck stiffness (possible meningitis — emergency)

Keywords

What symptoms might indicate a serious spinal problem that needs urgent medical care?

This could be due to any of the following:

  1. Loss of bladder or bowel control — could suggest cauda equina syndrome, a medical emergency.
  2. Severe back pain radiating down the legs — may indicate nerve compression or herniated disc.
  3. Numbness or weakness in limbs — sign of spinal cord or nerve root involvement.
  4. Sudden paralysis or inability to walk — could point to acute spinal cord injury or stroke.
     
Subscribe to Back pain