Diagnosing Corticobasal Syndrome Based on the Presence of Visual Hallucinations and Imaging with Amyloid Positron Emission Tomography
Abstract A 61-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital due to memory difficulties, visual hallucinations, and slowly progressing motor difficulties in the limbs. A clinical examination revealed bradykinesia, gait disturbance, left-side-dominant rigidity, ideomotor apraxia, dressing apraxia, left-sided spatial agnosia, impaired visuospatial ability, and executive dysfunction. Her symptoms were unresponsive to levodopa, and corticobasal syndrome (CBS) was diagnosed. One year later, amyloid positron emission tomography revealed amyloid beta accumulation in the bilateral cerebral cortices; at this point, CBS with underlying Alzheimer’s
This article is available to registered members
Create a free account to access our full library of peer-reviewed research on medical cannabis.
Join — it's freeAlready a member? Log in
