Corticobasal syndrome / corticobasal degeneration
Diagnosis
CBS clinical criteria (Armstrong 2013) (note that other clinical phenotypes, including FBS, naPPA, and PSP may also have CBD pathology)
1) Probable CBS
- a. Must have asymmetric presentation
- b. Must have at least two of the following:
- i. Limb rigidity or akinesia
- ii. Limb dystonia
- iii. Limb myoclonus
- c. Must have at least two of the following:
- i. Orobuccal or limb apraxia
- ii. Cortical sensory deficit (i.e. agraphesthesia, astereognosis)
- iii. Alien limb phenomena (more than simple levitation)
2) Possible CBS
- a. Must have asymmetric presentation
- b. Must have at least one of the following:
- i. Limb rigidity or akinesia
- ii. Limb dystonia
- iii. Limb myoclonus
- c. Must have at least one of the following:
- i. Orobuccal or limb apraxia
- ii. Cortical sensory deficit
- iii. Alien limb phenomena (more than simple levitation)
- patients with CBS will often have deficits within domains of executive functioning, writing, as and visuospatial construction (Finger 2016)
- neuroimaging shows asymmetric frontal and parietal lobe atrophy (Finger 2016
Other possible presentations of underlying corticobasal degeneration pathology: (Armstrong 2013)
1) Frontal behavioral-spatial syndrome
- a. Must have at least two of the following:
- i. Executive dysfunction
- ii. Behavioral or personality changes
- iii. Visuospatial deficits
2) Nonfluent / agrammatic variant primary progressive aphasia
3) Progressive supranuclear palsy (Steele-Richardson-Olszewski)
Pathology
Proposed pathologic criteria for the diagnosis of CBD require: (Armstrong 2013)
- a) The detection of characteristic tau-immunoreactive lesions in the neurons, glia, and cell processes of the cortex and striatum (caudate and putamen), particularly astrocytic plaques and thread-like lesions in both white matter and gray matter
- b) In conjunction with neuronal loss in focal cortical regions and in the substantia nigra
- c) Supportive features include ballooned cortical neurons, cortical atrophy, and tau-positive oligodendroglial coiled bodies
- pathology is typically 4R tau (CBD) > (Alzheimer’s pathology) > PSP, TDP-43 > 3R tau 92
References
Armstrong, M. J. et al. Criteria for the diagnosis of corticobasal degeneration. Neurology 80, 496–503 (2013). https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23359374/
Finger, E. C. Frontotemporal Dementias. Contin. Minneap. Minn 22, 464–489 (2016). https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27042904/