Progressive hemiparetic syndrome (PHS) represents an uncommon but well-documented presenting phenotype of corticobasal syndrome (CBS), characterized by the gradual development of unilateral weakness, spasticity, and cortical signs that progressively involve one side of the body. This presentation can be mistaken for stroke, tumor, or other focal CNS lesions, leading to diagnostic delays.
The hemiparetic presentation of CBS reflects the characteristic asymmetric pathophysiology of the disease, with early and predominant involvement of cortical and subcortical structures contralateral to the affected side. Unlike the classic CBS presentation with prominent apraxia and cortical sensory deficits, the hemiparetic variant may initially present primarily with motor weakness that mimics upper motor neuron lesions.
Progressive Unilateral Weakness:
- Insidious onset of weakness affecting one side of the body
- Typically begins in the upper extremity and progresses to involve the lower extremity
- May remain confined to one side for months to years before bilateral involvement
- Strength deficits range from mild paresis to near-complete hemiplegia
Spasticity:
- Velocity-dependent increase in tone
- Typically affects antigravity muscles (flexors in upper limb, extensors in lower limb)
- Develops as the disease progresses
- Often accompanies weakness in a pattern characteristic of corticobasal degeneration
Asymmetric Onset:
- The hallmark of CBS - unilateral presentation differentiates it from Parkinson's disease (typically bilateral) and progressive supranuclear palsy (often symmetric)
- Left hemisphere involvement may present with right-sided weakness and language features
- Right hemisphere involvement may present with left-sided weakness and neglect features
Despite the prominence of weakness, cortical signs characteristic of CBS are present:
Apraxia:
- Ideomotor apraxia affecting the weak limb
- Often disproportionate to the degree of weakness
- Critical for differentiating from vascular hemiparesis
Cortical Sensory Loss:
- Two-point discrimination deficits
- Astereognosis (inability to identify objects by touch)
- Graphesthesia (inability to identify drawn figures)
- Allodynia or sensory neglect
Alien Limb Phenomenon:
- May develop in the affected limb
- Feeling of foreign ownership
- Involuntary movements toward objects
- Hyperreflexia: Deep tendon reflexes increased on affected side
- Babinski sign: May be present in advanced cases
- Clonus: Ankle clonus may be elicitable
- Frontal release signs: Primitive reflexes may emerge
The hemiparetic presentation reflects asymmetric involvement of:
- Motor cortex (precentral gyrus): Primary cortical motor neuron degeneration
- Corticospinal tract: Degeneration of descending motor pathways
- Basal ganglia: Particularly the putamen and globus pallidus
- Subcortical white matter: Including the internal capsule
The hemiparetic phenotype is most commonly associated with:
- 4R Tau pathology: Corticobasal degeneration with predominant tau deposition
- TDP-43 pathology: Some cases show TDP-43 inclusions
- Alzheimer's disease pathology: A smaller subset with AD-type pathology may present with this phenotype
The asymmetry likely reflects the focal onset of tau pathology in one cortical region, with subsequent spread to ipsilateral subcortical structures and then potentially to the contralateral side.
The hemiparetic presentation of CBS must be distinguished from:
| Condition |
Key Differentiating Features |
CBS Features That Help |
| Stroke |
Sudden onset, territorial infarct on MRI |
Insidious progression, cortical signs present |
| Brain tumor |
MRI mass effect |
MRI shows cortical atrophy, not mass |
| Primary lateral sclerosis |
No cortical signs, slower progression |
Apraxia, alien limb present |
| Hemiparkinsonism |
No cortical signs |
Cortical sensory loss, apraxia |
| MS |
Younger age, demyelinating lesions |
Older onset, asymmetric cortical atrophy |
A related condition that overlaps with CBS hemiparetic presentation:
- Unilateral parkinsonism with associated atrophy
- Often begins in childhood or early adulthood
- May represent an early-onset form of asymmetric neurodegeneration
- Detailed history: Progressive, not acute onset
- Neurological examination: Document cortical signs on the weak side
- Motor examination: Assess for apraxia disproportionate to weakness
- Sensory examination: Test for cortical sensory loss
MRI Findings:
- Asymmetric frontoparietal cortical atrophy
- Atrophy of the precentral gyrus contralateral to weakness
- Basal ganglia atrophy, particularly putamen
- May show "knife-edge" atrophy of cortical margins
Functional Imaging:
- FDG-PET: Hypometabolism in asymmetric frontoparietal regions
- DaT-SPECT: Asymmetric dopaminergic deficit
The Armstrong criteria for CBS support the hemiparetic presentation as a core feature when:
- Progressive asymmetry of parkinsonism
- Plus one or more cortical signs (apraxia, alien limb, cortical sensory loss)
- Insidious onset and gradual progression
- Levodopa: Often minimally responsive, unlike Parkinson's disease
- Muscle relaxants: For spasticity (baclofen, tizanidine)
- Botulinum toxin: For focal dystonia if present
- Physical therapy: Focus on maintaining function, preventing contractures
- Occupational therapy: Adaptive techniques for ADLs
- Speech therapy: For associated speech disorders
The hemiparetic variant of CBS generally follows the same disease course as classic CBS:
- Progressive disability over 5-10 years
- Eventual bilateral involvement
- Median survival: 6-8 years from symptom onset
- May have slightly different prognosis than other subtypes
A typical case presentation:
A 62-year-old right-handed woman presented with 18 months of progressive right-hand weakness, initially noticed as difficulty writing and buttoning clothes. Over subsequent months, she developed right arm stiffness and clumsiness. Examination revealed right-sided hyperreflexia, mild right arm weakness (MRC 4/5), and apraxia of the right hand. MRI showed asymmetric left frontoparietal cortical atrophy. Over the next year, she developed cortical sensory loss in the right hand and became unable to use her right arm functionally. The progressive, asymmetric onset with cortical signs was felt to represent CBS presenting as progressive hemiparesis.
- Understanding why some patients present with hemiparesis while others present with cortical signs
- Biomarkers to predict progression from unilateral to bilateral disease
- Neuropathological correlation studies