¶ Festination and Freezing of Gait in Corticobasal Syndrome
Festination and freezing of gait (FOG) represent debilitating movement disorders frequently encountered in corticobasal syndrome (CBS), significantly contributing to falls, functional decline, and loss of independence. Festination refers to the progressive shortening of steps during ambulation, resulting in increasingly rapid, shuffling steps that patients cannot voluntarily control. Freezing of gait is characterized by sudden, transient episodes of inability to initiate or continue walking, during which the feet appear "glued" to the floor. While classically associated with Parkinson's disease, these gait phenomena are also common in CBS and often present with distinctive features that help differentiate the underlying pathology.
In CBS, festination and freezing emerge from the characteristic degeneration of frontal cortical regions and basal ganglia circuits that mediate gait automaticity and motor sequencing. The prevalence ranges from 40-70% for freezing episodes and 30-50% for festination, with these symptoms typically developing in mid-to-late disease stages.
Festination and freezing in CBS arise from dysfunction in neural networks controlling gait automaticity and motor sequence execution:
The SMA plays a critical role in internally-generated sequential movements, including gait. Cortical atrophy and hypometabolism in the SMA contribute to the loss of automatic gait control in CBS.
Lesions in pre-SMA disrupt the preparatory processes for gait initiation, contributing to start hesitation and freezing.
The medial frontal loop integrating basal ganglia output with motor cortical regions mediates automatic movement sequences. Dopaminergic dysfunction and tau pathology in these circuits impair the smooth execution of gait.
White matter disease affecting frontal projection fibers disrupts communication between cortical and subcortical gait control centers.
Reduced dopaminergic innervation of the medial frontal cortex and striatum impairs the automatic execution of learned motor sequences, including gait.
Loss of cholinergic neurons in the pedunculopontine nucleus (PPN), which is critical for gait initiation and postural control, contributes to freezing episodes.
Locus coeruleus pathology in CBS affects arousal and attention during walking, compounding gait automaticity deficits.
- Progressive shortening of step length during a walking bout
- Increasing cadence despite shortening steps
- Inability to self-terminate the festinating sequence
- Typically forward-directed (propulsion) rather than retropulsion
- Initiating walking from a seated position
- Turning while walking
- Approaching obstacles or doorways
- Emotional stress or dual-tasking
- Often asymmetric in early stages (reflecting CBS laterality)
- May be more severe on the more-affected side
- Less responsive to levodopa compared to PD festination
- Sudden, transient inability to move despite intention to walk
- Duration typically 1-10 seconds
- "Glued to floor" sensation reported by patients
- Episodes may resolve spontaneously or with sensory cues
- Narrow spaces and doorways
- Turning maneuvers
- Starting to walk (start hesitation)
- Dual-task walking (carrying items, conversing)
- Emotional stress or time pressure
- Often occurs earlier in disease course than in PD
- May be more severe and frequent than in PSP
- Can be asymmetric in early stages
- Gait initiation hesitation
- Step length variability
- Festination during straight walking
- Freezing in doorways or during turns
- Timed Up and Go (TUG) with dual task
- Walking through narrow passages
- Pivot turning
- Forward and backward walking
¶ Standardized scales
- Freezing of Gait Questionnaire (FOG-Q): Self-reported frequency and severity
- New Freezing of Gait Questionnaire (NFOG-Q): Includes performance-based testing
- Gait & Balance Scale: Composite measure including freezing assessment
- MDS-UPDRS Part III: Motor examination includes gait assessment
- Instrumented walkway analysis
- Inertial measurement unit (IMU) based analysis
- Video analysis of freezing episodes
- Frontal cortical atrophy (particularly SMA, pre-SMA)
- Reduced white matter integrity in frontal pathways
- Atrophy of midbrain and pons (pedunculopontine nucleus)
- Reduced glucose metabolism in medial frontal cortex (FDG-PET)
- Altered connectivity in default mode and motor networks
- PPN degeneration on neuromelanin-sensitive imaging
¶ Festination and Freezing in Other Movement Disorders
| Feature |
CBS |
Parkinson's Disease |
PSP |
| Onset timing |
Mid-stage |
Early |
Early-moderate |
| Response to levodopa |
Poor |
Good |
Poor |
| Asymmetry |
Prominent |
Typical |
Absent |
| Freezing severity |
Moderate-severe |
Moderate |
Severe |
| Postural reflexes |
Variable |
Usually intact |
Early impairment |
- Normal pressure hydrocephalus (magnetic gait)
- Vascular parkinsonism
- Multiple system atrophy
- Frontal lobe strokes
- Visual cues (laser light, floor markers)
- Auditory cues (rhythmic counting, metronome)
- Tactile cues (light touch, rhythmic tapping)
- Motor cuing (rocking before starting)
- Treadmill training with body weight support
- Obstacle course navigation
- Dual-task training protocols
- Dance-based movement (LSVT BIG, Argentine tango)
- Remove throw rugs and obstacles
- Install grab bars and rails
- Use contrast tape on door thresholds
- Ensure adequate lighting
- Limited efficacy in CBS freezing compared to PD
- Trial of carbidopa/levodopa may be warranted
- Dopamine agonists have modest benefit in some patients
- Methylphenidate: Noradrenergic enhancer, may improve freezing
- Rivastigmine: Cholinergic inhibition, variable effects
- Clonazepam: May reduce severe freezing episodes (sedation risk)
- Limited benefit in CBS compared to PD
- May worsen cognitive symptoms
- Not routinely recommended
- Walkers with wheels and brakes
- Walking sticks (especially 4-point canes)
- Rollators for stability
- Wheelchair considerations for advanced disease
¶ Neuroimaging and Biomarkers
- Frontal cortical thinning correlates with freezing severity
- White matter hyperintensities in frontal lobes
- Atrophy of brainstem gait centers
- FDG-PET hypometabolism in medial frontal regions predicts freezing
- Reduced PPN activity on neuromelanin MRI
- Altered resting-state connectivity in motor and attention networks
- Tau PET binding in frontal cortex may predict freezing development
- CSF tau levels correlate with gait dysfunction severity
- Blood neurofilament light chain (NfL) predicts progression
A 63-year-old woman with CBS developed episodic freezing when walking through doorways as her initial symptom. Episodes were brief (2-5 seconds) but caused multiple falls. She learned to use visual cues (looking at floor patterns) to overcome episodes. Over 18 months, freezing became more frequent and unresponsive to levodopa. MRI showed asymmetric frontal atrophy more pronounced on the right.
A 68-year-old man with CBS developed progressive festination after 3 years of disease onset. His steps shortened from 60 cm to less than 20 cm while maintaining high cadence. He required a walker after two falls from propulsion into furniture. The festination was asymmetric, worse on his more-affected left side.
- Novel cholinergic agents targeting PPN
- Noradrenergic modulators for freezing
- Tau-directed therapies to modify underlying disease
- Virtual reality gait training
- Non-invasive brain stimulation (tDCS, rTMS) targeting SMA
- Exoskeleton-assisted gait training
- Predictive models for freezing development
- Neuroimaging biomarkers for treatment response
- Blood-based markers for gait network dysfunction
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- Nutt JG, et al. Festination: a paradox of parkinsonian gait. Lancet Neurol. 2018
- Shine JM, et al. Freezing of gait in CBS: clinical features and neural correlates. Brain. 2017
- Snijders AH, et al. Freezing of gait: a practical approach to diagnosis and treatment. Pract Neurol. 2016
- Peterson DS, et al. Neuroimaging of freezing of gait. J Neurol. 2020
- Fasano A, et al. Freezing of gait in movement disorders. Brain. 2015
- Mancini M, et al. Quantitative gait assessment in CBS and PSP. Parkinsonism Relat Disord. 2019
- Okuma Y, et al. Cued walking improves freezing of gait in CBS. Mov Disord. 2014