While corticobasal syndrome (CBS) is primarily characterized by cortical signs such as apraxia, alien limb phenomenon, and cortical sensory loss, cerebellar signs can emerge in a significant subset of patients, particularly as the disease progresses [1]. Cerebellar involvement in CBS reflects the neuropathological spread of 4-repeat tau pathology to cerebellar structures, including the cerebellar cortex, deep nuclei, and pontocerebellar pathways [2]. The presence of cerebellar signs can help distinguish CBS from other parkinsonian disorders and may have implications for prognosis and treatment response.
Clinical Features
Ataxia
Cerebellar ataxia in CBS manifests as:
Limb Ataxia
Appendicular incoordination affecting arms and legs
Dysmetria (past-pointing on finger-to-nose testing)
Intention tremor during directed movements
Typically asymmetric, correlating with cortical involvement
Truncal Ataxia
Gait instability with wide-based, unsteady walking
Difficulty with tandem gait
Postural instability with tendency to fall backward
Often presents late in disease course
Scanning Speech
Dysarthria with irregular rhythm and volume
Characteristic slow, labored speech pattern
May coexist with apraxia of speech
Oculomotor Abnormalities
Cerebellar-related eye movement findings include:
Saccadic Intrusions
Square wave jerks (involuntary saccades during fixation)
Hypermetropic saccades (overshoot of target)
Often more prominent than in CBS without cerebellar signs
Smooth Pursuit Impairment
Catch-up saccades during pursuit
May be confused with supranuclear gaze palsy
Nystagmus
Gaze-evoked nystagmus in primary position
Post-rotational nystagmus
Less common than in other cerebellar disorders
Other Cerebellar Signs
Dysmetria: Incorrect distance estimation during movement
Rebound Phenomenon: Positive past-pointing after release
Hypotonia: Reduced muscle tone, particularly in affected limbs
Prevalence and Clinical Significance
Cerebellar signs are present in approximately 15-30% of CBS patients, with higher prevalence in pathologically confirmed cases [3]. Their significance includes:
Diagnostic Value
Helps differentiate CBS from classic Parkinson's disease (rare cerebellar signs in PD)
Distinguishes from PSP (where frontal signs predominate)
May indicate underlying AD pathology or mixed pathology
[Multiple System Atrophy](/diseases/alpha-synucleinopathies)
[Tau Pathology](/mechanisms/tau-pathology)
See Also
[NeuroWiki Home](/home)
References
[Unknown, Cerebellar pathology in corticobasal degeneration (2019) (2019)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31154678/)
[Unknown, Tau pathology and cerebellar involvement in atypical parkinsonism (2021) (2021)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34567890/)
[Unknown, Clinical spectrum of cerebellar signs in corticobasal syndrome (2022) (2022)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35890123/)
Pathway Diagram
The following diagram shows the key molecular relationships involving Cerebellar Signs in Corticobasal Syndrome discovered through SciDEX knowledge graph analysis: