Compulsive Repetitive Flexion With Breath-Holding in Sagging Brain Syndrome.

Neurol Clin Pract

Ataxia Center (JDS), Cognitive Behavioral Neurology Unit, Laboratory for Neuroanatomy and Cerebellar Neurobiology, Department of Neurology, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston; and Department of Neurosurgery (WIS), Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA.

Published: April 2024

Background And Objective: Spontaneous intracranial hypotension (SIH) from CSF leak commonly produces headache. It also may produce sagging brain syndrome (SBS), often with neurocognitive symptoms indistinguishable from behavioral-variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD). The authors describe a new clinical sign that appears to be pathognomonic of SBS.

Methods: We reviewed medical records and brain imaging in patients seen at our 2 centers who presented with SIH, SBS, and bvFTD symptoms.

Results: There were 51 patients (12 women, 39 men) with mean age 55.5 years (range, 26-70 years). MRI showed severe brain sagging in all. Thirteen patients displayed repetitive flexion with breath-holding at the time of clinical presentation. Five patients had repetitive flexion with breath-holding, which resolved before presenting for evaluation. Thus, 35.3% (18) of 51 patients with SBS displayed seemingly compulsive repetitive flexion with breath-holding.

Discussion: Compulsive repetitive flexion with breath-holding appears to be pathognomonic of SBS, deserving the acronym CoRFBiS (compulsive repetitive flexion with breath-holding in SBS). CoRFBiS should alert the clinician to SBS with SIH as the proximate cause of the clinical constellation, rather than bvFTD.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11073879PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1212/CPJ.0000000000200261DOI Listing

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