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Ideomotor Apraxia in Corticobasal Syndrome
Ideomotor [apraxia](/diseases/apraxia) is among the most distinctive and prevalent cortical signs in [corticobasal syndrome](/diseases/corticobasal-syndrome) (CBS), providing critical diagnostic value in distinguishing CBS from other [atypical parkinsonisms](/diseases/atypical-parkinsonism) such as [progressive supranuclear palsy](/diseases/progressive-supranuclear-palsy) and [Parkinson's disease](/diseases/parkinsons-disease).
Prevalence and Clinical Significance
Ideomotor apraxia occurs in approximately 70-80% of CBS patients, making it the most common cortical sign in the syndrome. Its presence reflects the characteristic cortical degeneration affecting the [premotor cortex](/brain-regions/premotor-cortex), [supplementary motor area](/brain-regions/supplementary-motor-area), and posterior parietal regions that define CBS pathophysiology.
Diagnostic Value
The presence and severity of ideomotor apraxia helps differentiate CBS from:
| Condition | Ideomotor Apraxia Prevalence | Key Differences | |-----------|----------------------------|------------------| | CBS | 70-80% | Severe, early, asymmetric | | PSP | 30-50% | Less severe, later onset | | PD | 10-20% | Rare, when present usually mild | |bvFTD| 50-70% | May be symmetric |
Neuroanatomical Basis
Cortical Regions Involved
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Ideomotor Apraxia in Corticobasal Syndrome
Ideomotor [apraxia](/diseases/apraxia) is among the most distinctive and prevalent cortical signs in [corticobasal syndrome](/diseases/corticobasal-syndrome) (CBS), providing critical diagnostic value in distinguishing CBS from other [atypical parkinsonisms](/diseases/atypical-parkinsonism) such as [progressive supranuclear palsy](/diseases/progressive-supranuclear-palsy) and [Parkinson's disease](/diseases/parkinsons-disease).
Prevalence and Clinical Significance
Ideomotor apraxia occurs in approximately 70-80% of CBS patients, making it the most common cortical sign in the syndrome. Its presence reflects the characteristic cortical degeneration affecting the [premotor cortex](/brain-regions/premotor-cortex), [supplementary motor area](/brain-regions/supplementary-motor-area), and posterior parietal regions that define CBS pathophysiology.
Diagnostic Value
The presence and severity of ideomotor apraxia helps differentiate CBS from:
| Condition | Ideomotor Apraxia Prevalence | Key Differences | |-----------|----------------------------|------------------| | CBS | 70-80% | Severe, early, asymmetric | | PSP | 30-50% | Less severe, later onset | | PD | 10-20% | Rare, when present usually mild | |bvFTD| 50-70% | May be symmetric |
Neuroanatomical Basis
Cortical Regions Involved
Premotor Cortex (BA6): Critical for motor planning and converting learned movements into execution
Supplementary Motor Area (SMA): Involved in sequential motor actions and bimanual coordination
Posterior Parietal Cortex: Integrates sensory information with motor commands
Corpus Callosum: Interhemispheric transfer of motor engrams
Neural Circuitry
Mermaid diagram (expand to render)
Pathological Correlation
The severity of ideomotor apraxia correlates with:
Tau pathology burden in premotor and parietal cortices
Asymmetric cortical atrophy on MRI
[FDG-PET](/imaging/fdg-pet) hypometabolism in frontoparietal regions
Clinical Features
Presentation Patterns
Asymmetric Onset (most characteristic)
Typically affects one limb, usually the left upper limb in right-handed individuals
Reflects the contralateral cortical pathology
Progresses to bilateral involvement over time
Limb Specificity
Upper limbs more affected than lower limbs
Face and speech can be affected (orofacial apraxia)
Axial movements relatively preserved
Task-Specific Difficulties
Inability to perform learned gestures on command
Inability to use objects correctly
Temporal sequencing errors
Spatial configuration errors
Temporal Profile
Early onset: Often present at diagnosis or within 1-2 years of symptom onset
Progression: Typically worsens over time
Correlation: Severity correlates with disease duration and cortical atrophy
Assessment Approaches
Standard Clinical Tests
| Test | Description | CBS-Specific Considerations | |------|-------------|----------------------------| | Ideomotor Apraxia Test | Pantomiming tool use on command | High sensitivity in CBS | | Imitation Test | Copy examiner's gestures | Assesses motor engrams | | Real-Object Use | Using actual tools | May be better preserved | | Sequential Movements | Multi-step motor chains | Early impairment |
Quantitative Measures
Apraxia Battery for CBS
20-item standardized assessment
Scores range 0-60
CBS mean: 32 ± 12 (vs. PSP: 45 ± 8)
Kinematic Analysis
Movement timing and coordination
Used in research settings
Differential Diagnosis from Similar Conditions
| Condition | Key Features | Distinguishing from CBS | |-----------|-------------|------------------------| | Bradykinesia | Slowness without praxis errors | Present in both; apraxia specific to CBS | | Dystonia | Involuntary posturing | Muscle activation pattern different | | Cortical sensory loss | Tactile recognition deficits | Can co-occur; test separately |
Pathophysiological Mechanisms
Primary Mechanisms
Motor Program Retrieval Failure
Inability to access learned motor patterns
Lesion location: premotor cortex, SMA
Motor Selection Impairment
Difficulty choosing appropriate movement
Lesion location: posterior parietal cortex
Sensorimotor Integration Deficit
Disconnection between sensory feedback and motor output
Lesion location: parietal-premotor connections
Secondary Factors
Alien limb phenomenon: Related but distinct; involves sense of limb ownership
Callosal dysfunction: Contributes to interhemispheric transfer deficits