Introduction: Who Should Undergo Diagnostics
People who begin noticing unusual problems with movement, especially when these difficulties affect only one side of the body at first, should consider seeking medical evaluation. If you find that one arm or leg becomes clumsy, stiff, or difficult to control, or if you experience tremors, jerky movements, or balance problems that seem different from normal aging, it’s time to consult a healthcare professional.[1]
Diagnostics become especially important when movement troubles are accompanied by other changes. These might include difficulty speaking clearly, trouble finding the right words, problems with memory or thinking, or changes in behavior and mood. Because corticobasal degeneration (CBD)—also called corticobasal syndrome—typically begins between ages 50 and 70, with an average onset around age 64, adults in this age range who notice such symptoms should not dismiss them as ordinary signs of getting older.[2]
The disease often starts with symptoms affecting just one limb before gradually spreading to other parts of the body. Early medical attention matters because while there’s currently no cure for CBD, proper diagnosis allows healthcare teams to provide supportive treatments that can improve quality of life and help manage symptoms more effectively.[3]
Diagnostic Methods
Clinical Evaluation and Medical History
The diagnosis of corticobasal degeneration relies heavily on a thorough medical history and detailed neurological examination rather than on any single laboratory test. A neurologist—a doctor who specializes in conditions affecting the brain and nerves—will ask detailed questions about when symptoms started, how they’ve progressed, and which parts of the body are affected.[4]
During the physical examination, the neurologist looks for specific patterns of symptoms. They pay close attention to whether one side of the body is more affected than the other, as CBD typically shows this asymmetric pattern, meaning it impacts one side much more severely. The doctor will test muscle stiffness, coordination, balance, walking ability, and how well you can perform purposeful movements.[6]
The neurologist will also assess cognitive functions like memory, language, and the ability to understand and process information. They might ask you to perform specific tasks to check for apraxia, which is difficulty carrying out learned movements despite having the physical ability to do them. An example would be being unable to wave goodbye on command, even though your arm can move normally.[7]
Brain Imaging Studies
Brain scans play an important role in diagnosing CBD, though not because they can definitively confirm the disease. Rather, imaging helps rule out other conditions that might cause similar symptoms and can reveal patterns consistent with CBD.[12]
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) is one of the most commonly used imaging tests. An MRI uses powerful magnets and radio waves to create detailed pictures of the brain’s structure. In people with CBD, an MRI may show specific patterns of brain shrinkage, called atrophy, particularly in the outer layer of the brain (the cerebral cortex) and in deeper structures involved in movement control (the basal ganglia). Often, this shrinkage appears more pronounced on one side of the brain, matching the more affected side of the body.[6]
Computed Tomography (CT) scans may also be performed. These scans use X-rays to create cross-sectional images of the brain. While CT scans are less detailed than MRI for viewing soft brain tissue, they can still help identify brain shrinkage and rule out other problems like strokes, tumors, or bleeding that could explain the symptoms.[12]
Sometimes doctors order multiple imaging tests several months apart to track changes in the brain over time. Watching how the brain changes can provide valuable clues about whether CBD is the correct diagnosis.[12]
Positron Emission Tomography (PET) scans are more specialized imaging tests that can identify brain changes related to corticobasal degeneration by showing how brain tissue functions rather than just its structure. However, PET scanning for CBD is still primarily a research tool, and more studies are needed before it becomes a standard diagnostic test.[12]
Blood and Cerebrospinal Fluid Testing
There are no blood tests that can diagnose CBD directly. However, doctors may test blood or cerebrospinal fluid (the liquid surrounding the brain and spinal cord) for specific proteins to help determine whether symptoms might be caused by other diseases instead.[12]
For example, healthcare providers might test for amyloid and tau proteins to see if Alzheimer’s disease could be causing the symptoms rather than CBD. While both conditions involve tau protein problems, the patterns differ. These tests help narrow down the diagnosis by ruling out alternative explanations.[12]
Ruling Out Similar Conditions
A crucial part of diagnosing CBD involves distinguishing it from other neurological diseases that produce similar symptoms. This process is called differential diagnosis. The doctor must carefully consider whether symptoms might be caused by Parkinson’s disease, progressive supranuclear palsy, Alzheimer’s disease, Pick’s disease, or Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease.[1]
Each of these conditions has overlapping features with CBD, but also important differences. For instance, while Parkinson’s disease causes movement problems, people with Parkinson’s often show good response to a medication called levodopa, whereas people with CBD typically do not respond well to this treatment. Progressive supranuclear palsy tends to cause more prominent eye movement problems and balance difficulties early on, while CBD usually shows more one-sided symptoms affecting a limb first.[8]
Sometimes the true diagnosis only becomes clear over time as the disease pattern emerges more fully, or even after death during autopsy examination. This uncertainty can be frustrating for patients and families, but it reflects the genuine complexity of these conditions.[4]
Challenges in Diagnosis
Diagnosing CBD accurately can be quite difficult, especially in the early stages when symptoms are mild or limited. Because symptoms vary widely from person to person and overlap with other diseases, neurologists often speak of corticobasal syndrome (CBS) rather than corticobasal degeneration during life. This term acknowledges that the set of symptoms observed could potentially stem from several different underlying brain diseases.[8]
Studies show that only about half of people diagnosed with corticobasal syndrome during life actually have corticobasal degeneration confirmed at autopsy. The second most common cause of corticobasal syndrome symptoms is Alzheimer’s disease. Other causes include progressive supranuclear palsy and other rare brain conditions.[9]
This diagnostic uncertainty doesn’t mean doctors are making mistakes. Rather, it reflects the reality that different brain diseases can damage similar areas and produce similar symptoms. The only way to confirm CBD with complete certainty is through microscopic examination of brain tissue after death, when pathologists can see the characteristic patterns of tau protein buildup and brain cell damage.[4]
Diagnostics for Clinical Trial Qualification
For people interested in participating in research studies or clinical trials for CBD, additional diagnostic assessments may be required beyond standard clinical evaluation. Clinical trials have specific entry criteria to ensure that participants truly have the condition being studied.[5]
Research protocols often require detailed documentation of symptoms through standardized clinical rating scales. These scales systematically measure the severity of movement problems, cognitive difficulties, and functional abilities. Researchers use these measurements as baseline data to track how participants respond to experimental treatments.[13]
Brain imaging studies like MRI or PET scans may be mandatory for trial enrollment. Some research studies require specific patterns of brain atrophy or metabolic changes to be visible on scans before accepting participants. These imaging requirements help ensure that study participants have similar disease characteristics, making research results more reliable.[6]
Certain trials may require specialized testing to rule out other conditions more definitively. This could include detailed cognitive testing, specific blood tests, genetic testing, or even cerebrospinal fluid analysis obtained through lumbar puncture (spinal tap). While these tests might not be necessary for standard clinical care, they help researchers understand the disease better and ensure study participants meet strict criteria.[13]
Some clinical trials focus on testing treatments that target tau protein, the abnormal protein that builds up in brain cells in CBD. For these studies, researchers might require evidence of tau pathology through specialized imaging with tau PET tracers or through biomarker testing in cerebrospinal fluid.[16]
Genetic testing may be part of clinical trial screening, even though CBD is not typically inherited. Researchers know that many people with CBD carry a genetic variation called the H1 haplotype on chromosome 17, which may influence tau protein production. Some trials might specifically enroll people with or without this genetic marker to study how it affects disease progression or treatment response.[2]



