The aim of the study was to find out the relationship between the Babinski reflex and flexor polysynaptic reflexes which was evaluated by sural nerve stimulation, and to evaluate the descending motor pathway in involvement by cervical and transcortical cranial stimulation (TCCS) in a group of patients that were diagnosed as having the Babinski sign with either hemiparetic of hemiplegic, due to a cerebrovascular accident. In the normal population no significant responses were seen from the EHL by sural stimulation and these responses were recorded from the BF with a latency of 88 msec. In the patients who had Babinski reflex responses, signs could be easily recorded from EHL by sural stimulation with a latency of 166 msec. In this group, reflex responses from the BF were recorded with a latency of approximately 100 msec. Responses from the EHL were evaluated in 100% ratio by TCCS with a latency of 33.4 msec. in the normal group. The responses recorded from EHL by TCCS and latency was 47.5 msec. in 35.7% of the patients, who having Babinski sign. In 100% of the normal population, responses were evaluated with a latency of 28.8 msec. from EHL by cervical stimulation. In only 55% of the patients having the Babinski sign, responses were recorded in the same limb with a latency was 32.3 msec. These results support a different mechanism that control the EHL muscle in comparison to the BF muscle having dysfunction of descending motor tracts due to a pyramidal lesion.