LEARN HOW TO TEST YOUR FAMILY FOR RETAINED PRIMITIVE REFLEXES HERE.  

Possible symptoms of active/retained Primitive Reflexes

Take a look below at our Primitive Reflex symptons checklist & consider what your child struggles with. If your child struggles with the activity about half the time then this is also possibly a sign that they may have active/retained Primitive Reflexes.

If you would like to learn how to test your family for active/retained Primitive Reflexes you can watch & learn with Michelle HERE at no cost.

MORO & STARTLE REFLEX

  • Over or under-reacting to stimuli

  • Difficulty ignoring background noise

  • Easily distracted, poor memory and sequencing skills

  • Shy/timid, withdrawn

  • Dislike of change or surprise

  • Poor impulse control

  • Excessive blinking

  • Problems maintaining eye contact

  • Easily distracted

  • Struggles with social skills

  • Low immune system

  • Anxiety/nervousness

  • Mood swings

  • Allergies/chronic illness

  • Stressful birth

BABINSKI/PLANTAR REFLEX

  • Toe walking

  • Issues with proprioception and vestibular system

  • Trouble with balance

  • Gravitational insecurity (not confidence in their sense of stability)

  • Trouble with vestibular, visual and sensory systems

  • Running awkwardly

  • Can’t press toes into ground

  • Difficulty or delay in walking (beyond 14 months)

  • Problems with sports requiring balance and coordination while running

  • Difficulty walking in dark (without aid of vision)

  • Low back pain while walking and/or standing

  • Recurrent ankle twisting, shin soreness, calf/achilles tendonitis, injury or pain

TLR - TONIC LABRYNTHINE REFLEX

  • Poor motor planning and coordination

  • Poor balance, especially when looking down

  • Ocular-motor dysfunction, tracking, convergence - double vision

  • Difficulty with spatial problems when writing

  • Difficulty with own body spatial awareness, bumps into things and people

  • Dislike of upper body sports and difficulty catching ball

  • Weak neck muscles, poor head control

  • Fear of heights

  • Motion sick

  • Toe walking

  • Speech and auditory challenges

  • Problems with eye tracking, distance near to far, converging eyes

  • Poor sequencing skills for reading, writing and math’s

  • Difficulty understanding sense of time and sequencing events

STNR - SYMMETRICAL TONIC REFLEX 

  • Difficulty crawling or skips with incomplete crawling pattern

  • Poor balance, instability, core strength, low muscle tone and coordination struggles

  • Struggles with sport

  • Difficulty coordinating upper and lower body together

  • Difficulty throwing and catching ball

  • Struggles with swimming, battles to lift head above water while coordinating upper and lower body. Swims better with head under water

  • Poor seating position, slouches, W sits, wraps legs on chair or sits on heels

  • Poor standing posture, walks/runs with bent elbows ‘ape-like’

  • Clumsy, messy eater and writing, copying from board looking up and down

  • Struggles to dress, brush teeth, tie shoelaces

  • Struggles following muli-step instructions

ATNR - ASSYMETRICAL TONIC NECK REFLEX

  • Problems with vision

  • Visual perception difficulties such as mixing up ‘d’ and ‘b’

  • Problems with hand-eye coordination

  • Poor cognitive processing

  • Poor creative writing, expression of thoughts on paper

  • Math’s, spelling, language, handwriting and reading challenges

  • Confusion with right and left so mixed dominance of eye, ear, foot and hand

  • Awkward gait, walk, arm swing

  • Hyperactivity

  • Difficulty when playing sport, catching and throwing

  • Poor balance

  • Difficulty crossing midline and passing objects from one side of body to the other

  • Difficulty marching on the spot, right and left

  • Difficulty with counterbalance, such as skipping

SPINAL GALANT REFLEX

  • Dislike of sports

  • Bedwetting and/or poor bladder control beyond age of five

  • Inability to sit still and constantly fidgets and changes position - ‘Ants in pants’

  • Slouches in chair

  • Problems with ‘near’ focus- reading

  • Poor concentration, racing mind

  • Dislike of tags on clothing, tucking in of shirt or tight waistbands

  • Lack of focus and attention to task

  • Poor short-term memory, necessary to build long-term memory and good working memory

  • Auditory processing and sensory integration problems

  • Posture issues, chronic back and neck pain

  • Hop rotation to one side appearing as a limp

PALMAR REFLEX

  • Thumb sucking, stick tongue out when concentrating, especially when tightly holding onto something

  • Struggles with handwriting, holds pencil very tightly or often breaks pencils, cramps in hand when writing

  • Sensitive palms

  • Poor fine motor control and manual dexterity

  • Messy handwriting and poor pencil grip

  • Struggles to fasten buttons

  • Back aches when sitting

ROOT & SUCK REFLEX

  • Sensitivity around mouth

  • Sensitivity with textures and solid foods

  • Thumb sucking, sticks tongue out when concentrating

  • Speech and articulation problems (stuttering, lisp)

  • Difficulty swallowing and chewing

  • Dribbling

  • Dexterity problems when talking

Learn how to check your family for Primitive Reflexes at home

We would like every parent to know how to check their family for Primitive Reflexes. Take a look at these videos with Michelle where she shows you how to test your family for active Primitive Reflexes within the comfort of your own home.