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Is the pathology of corticobasal syndrome predictable in life?

Is the pathology of corticobasal syndrome predictable in life?
Is the pathology of corticobasal syndrome predictable in life?
Corticobasal syndrome (CBS) has been associated with a heterogeneous spectrum of pathologies with an increasing number of reports of Alzheimer's type pathology. There is, however, no means of predicting pathology of CBS in vivo at present. We compared the clinical features of patients presenting with CBS who have either pathologic changes of classic corticobasal degeneration (CBD) or Alzheimer's disease (AD) at post-mortem to identify predictors of the specific pathological processes in life. Twelve patients with CBS were followed prospectively; six had AD and six had classic CBD neuropathology. After review of the presenting clinical features, we identified nine potential predictor variables, compared their frequency in the two groups, and performed a discriminant function analysis. Initial episodic memory complaints and poor performance on the combined orientation-memory subtest of the Addenbrooke's Cognitive Examination (ACE) reliably predicted AD pathology while varying combinations of early frontal-lobe type behavioral symptoms, nonfluent language disturbance, orobuccal apraxia, and utilization behavior predicted CBD pathology ante-mortem. CBS is frequently associated with Alzheimer's disease pathology. Early episodic memory impairment versus early behavioral symptomatology appears to best predict AD or CBD pathology in life. © 2009 Movement Disorder Society.
1593-1599
Shelley, Bhaskara P.
d1811558-a70f-4a06-b450-3a4174f35165
Hodges, John R.
c17af0a9-82e7-4f5a-8a97-d50ec06bbb0a
Kipps, Christopher M.
e43be016-2dc2-45e6-9a02-ab2a0e0208d5
Xuereb, John H.
84847142-ce70-40ac-8c21-66bb596b73ac
Bak, Thomas H.
fd18bde2-a467-43d8-8b4f-7b5077708bcb
Shelley, Bhaskara P.
d1811558-a70f-4a06-b450-3a4174f35165
Hodges, John R.
c17af0a9-82e7-4f5a-8a97-d50ec06bbb0a
Kipps, Christopher M.
e43be016-2dc2-45e6-9a02-ab2a0e0208d5
Xuereb, John H.
84847142-ce70-40ac-8c21-66bb596b73ac
Bak, Thomas H.
fd18bde2-a467-43d8-8b4f-7b5077708bcb

Shelley, Bhaskara P., Hodges, John R., Kipps, Christopher M., Xuereb, John H. and Bak, Thomas H. (2009) Is the pathology of corticobasal syndrome predictable in life? Movement Disorders, 24 (11), 1593-1599. (doi:10.1002/mds.22558).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Corticobasal syndrome (CBS) has been associated with a heterogeneous spectrum of pathologies with an increasing number of reports of Alzheimer's type pathology. There is, however, no means of predicting pathology of CBS in vivo at present. We compared the clinical features of patients presenting with CBS who have either pathologic changes of classic corticobasal degeneration (CBD) or Alzheimer's disease (AD) at post-mortem to identify predictors of the specific pathological processes in life. Twelve patients with CBS were followed prospectively; six had AD and six had classic CBD neuropathology. After review of the presenting clinical features, we identified nine potential predictor variables, compared their frequency in the two groups, and performed a discriminant function analysis. Initial episodic memory complaints and poor performance on the combined orientation-memory subtest of the Addenbrooke's Cognitive Examination (ACE) reliably predicted AD pathology while varying combinations of early frontal-lobe type behavioral symptoms, nonfluent language disturbance, orobuccal apraxia, and utilization behavior predicted CBD pathology ante-mortem. CBS is frequently associated with Alzheimer's disease pathology. Early episodic memory impairment versus early behavioral symptomatology appears to best predict AD or CBD pathology in life. © 2009 Movement Disorder Society.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 2 March 2009
e-pub ahead of print date: 16 June 2009
Published date: 15 August 2009

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 489387
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/489387
PURE UUID: 263ae47a-3006-4162-b8c9-aacbc53281bb
ORCID for Christopher M. Kipps: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5205-9712

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Date deposited: 23 Apr 2024 16:34
Last modified: 24 Apr 2024 01:56

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Contributors

Author: Bhaskara P. Shelley
Author: John R. Hodges
Author: Christopher M. Kipps ORCID iD
Author: John H. Xuereb
Author: Thomas H. Bak

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