Postural dysfunction in Corticobasal Syndrome (CBS) represents a distinctive clinical feature that differs from the classic retropulsion seen in Progressive Supranuclear Palsy (PSP). The asymmetric onset of CBS creates unique patterns of postural instability characterized by lateralized deficits, preferential direction of falls, and distinctive therapeutic challenges. Unlike PSP where patients characteristically fall backward, CBS patients may fall in multiple directions depending on the pattern of cortical and subcortical involvement [1].
Postural control involves a distributed network:
| Structure | Function in Posture |
|---|---|
| Primary somatosensory cortex (S1) | Body position awareness |
| Posterior parietal cortex | Integration of sensory information |
| Supplementary motor area (SMA) | Postural planning |
| Basal ganglia | Automatic postural adjustments |
| Brainstem vestibular nuclei | Vestibular integration |
| Cerebellum | Coordination and adjustment |
| Spinal cord proprioceptive tracts | Peripheral feedback |
In CBS, tau pathology affects these structures asymmetrically:
The combination creates a multifactorial postural deficit distinct from basal ganglia-only disorders like PSP[^2].
Postural dysfunction occurs in approximately 70-85% of CBS patients during the disease course, making it one of the most common features. Unlike PSP where postural instability is typically an early feature, CBS patients may develop postural deficits at variable disease stages.
The hallmark of CBS:
| Direction | Frequency in CBS | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Lateral (to affected side) | 40-50% | Most common |
| Backward | 25-30% | Less than PSP |
| Forward | 15-20% | Often trip-related |
| Variable/multidirectional | 10-15% | Severe disease |
This contrasts with PSP where >90% fall backward.
The "pull test" (posterior displacement) shows distinct patterns in CBS:
| Finding | CBS | PSP |
|---|---|---|
| Latency to correction | Normal to mildly delayed | Severely delayed |
| Number of steps | 1-2 steps (asymmetric) | >3 steps or fall |
| Arm movement | Unilateral reduced | Bilateral, guarding |
| Body sway | Lateral preference | Pure posterior |
| Response Type | CBS Pattern | Impairment |
|---|---|---|
| Compensatory step | Delayed, asymmetric | Moderate |
| Arm extension | Unilateral absent | Severe on affected side |
| Trunk adjustment | Reduced on one side | Variable |
| ** equilibrium** | Visuallyguided impaired | Variable |
Item 3.12: Postural stability
14 items scored 0-4 (total 56):
CBS norms:
40: Low fall risk
| Measure | CBS Finding |
|---|---|
| Sway area | Increased, especially with eyes closed |
| Center of pressure velocity | Elevated |
| Latency to perturbation | Delayed (affected side) |
| Adaptation | Reduced with repeated trials |
| Condition | CBS Performance |
|---|---|
| Condition 1 (fixed, eyes open) | Near normal |
| Condition 2 (fixed, eyes closed) | Moderately impaired |
| Condition 3 (fixed, visual conflict) | Impaired |
| Condition 4 (platform moving, eyes open) | Severely impaired |
| Condition 5 (platform moving, eyes closed) | Very severely impaired |
| Condition 6 (platform moving, visual conflict) | Most impaired |
| Feature | Correlation with Posture |
|---|---|
| Bradykinesia | Moderate (r=0.4-0.5) |
| Rigidity | Moderate (r=0.3-0.4) |
| Myoclonus | Weak |
| Dystonia | Moderate-to-strong |
| Cortical sensory loss | Strong (r=0.6-0.7) |
| Apraxia | Moderate |
Postural dysfunction correlates with:
| Disease Stage | Postural Function |
|---|---|
| Early (1-2 years) | Near normal or mildly impaired |
| Middle (2-5 years) | Moderate impairment, asymmetric |
| Late (5+ years) | Severe impairment, bilateral |
| Agent | Effect | Evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Levodopa | Minimal | Poor response typical |
| Dopamine agonists | Minimal | Limited evidence |
| Amantadine | Variable | Rare reports |
| Agent | Target | Evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Clonazepam | Myoclonus-posture link | Limited |
| Donepezil | Cognitive contribution | Mixed |
| Methylphenidate | Attention-posture link | Experimental |
Note: No medications are specifically approved for postural dysfunction in CBS.
| Technique | Description | Evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Balance training | Progressive standing tasks | Strong |
| Strength training | Lower extremity focus | Strong |
| Aerobic exercise | Walking, cycling | Moderate |
| Tai Chi | Balance and movement | Moderate |
| Dance therapy | Combined approach | Limited |
| Aquatic therapy | Reduced fall risk | Moderate |
1. Proprioceptive training
2. Vestibular compensation
3. Compensatory strategies
| Device | Indication | Considerations |
|---|---|---|
| Single-point cane | Mild imbalance | Least restrictive |
| Quad cane | Moderate deficits | Requires upper strength |
| Walker | Significant deficits | May worsen falls if used incorrectly |
| Wheelchair | Severe disease | Late-stage |
Critical note: Assistive devices in CBS require careful training:
| Feature | CBS | PSP |
|---|---|---|
| Onset | Asymmetric | Symmetric |
| Direction of falls | Variable/lateral | Backward |
| Pull test | Asymmetric | Severely impaired |
| Early postural instability | Variable | Characteristic |
| Arm placement | Impaired on one side | Bilateral retropulsion |
| Feature | CBS | PD |
|---|---|---|
| Postural deficits | Early, severe | Late, milder |
| Response to levodopa | Poor | Good |
| Pull test | More severe | Less severe |
| Asymmetry | Present | May decrease over time |
| Feature | CBS | VP |
|---|---|---|
| Onset | Gradual | Stepwise |
| Asymmetry | Characteristic | Often symmetric |
| Posture | Variable | Forward flexion |
| Gait | Careful, variable | Shuffling, magnetic |
| Modifiable | Non-modifiable |
|---|---|
| Medication use | Age |
| Environmental hazards | Disease duration |
| Footwear | Previous falls |
| Assistive device use | Cognitive status |
| Physical inactivity | Vision |
| Orthostatic hypotension | Depression |
A critical consideration in CBS:
Intervention: Address fear of falling directly with behavioral and exercise interventions.
Phase 1: Assessment (Weeks 1-2)
Phase 2: Targeted Training (Weeks 3-8)
Phase 3: Integration (Weeks 9-12)
Phase 4: Maintenance (Ongoing)