Twenty patients (7 females and 13 males) with cauda equina lesions (12 herniated lumbar disks, 4 tumours, and 4 compression fractures of the lumbar spine), were treated according to a standardized management of their urinary and digestive symptoms, after surgery. The bladder emptying inability was managed by Crédé manoeuver facilitated by appropriate drugs completed by self intermittent catheterization. The constipation was treated by non irritant osmotic laxatives, and defecation obtained by abdominal straining, was facilitated by a suppository. All the patients recovered a sphincteric autonomy, without invalidating incontinence. Within 3 to 6 months, eleven patients improved enough bladder emptying to stop drugs and self-catheterization. None presented urinary incontinence. Within the same time, 14 had a stool daily, but medical treatment of the constipation had to be carried on in all of the 20 patients. None of the patients had incontinence for the solid stools, but only the patients who improved (spontaneously or after biofeedback therapy) the voluntary anal sphincter contraction were continent for the gaz, and liquid stools. The intermittent self-catheterization release (a complete emptying of the bladder being achieved) was more frequent after tumor treatment than after herniated disk, or compressive fracture treatment; the same release happened in case of immediate management if compared with delayed management of the urinary symptoms. Adversely, the digestive recovering was not influenced by either the etiology of the cauda equina lesions or the therapeutic management delay. Defecography demonstrated anatomical disturbances of the rectoanal apparatus such as perineal descent and/or mucosal prolapse, which could be secondary to the abdominal straining necessary to complete bladder and rectum emptying.