What is Moro Reflex?

Moro Reflex 

The Moro reflex is a protective and involuntary reaction to a threat, it acts as a survival mechanism in the first months of life. 

 The Moro Reflex is present from birth to 4 months of age (it emerges in utero at the 9th week). Integration starts in the 3rd month, where it becomes absorbed as part of whole-body movements by the baby. In a newborn, the More Reflex is triggered by the infant’s head position; tilting backwards or by lower and raising the baby quickly and by more than 30cm. The arms extend out, and the baby inhales. Next, the baby draws limbs into the body, exhales, and may start to cry.  

 What is a Retained Moro Reflex

A child with a retained Moro Reflex automatically overreacts to many different things, from bright lights, loud noises and or sudden movement. The infant has no time to think; it just reacts to the negative stimulus. Thus the higher thinking centres routinely need to get an opportunity to participate. 

 

Retained Moro Reflex Symptoms

  • motion sickness

  • physical timidity

  • easily distracted

  • Sensitive to sounds (may perceive as too loud), light (may feel uncomfortable in direct or bright light) and or being touched

  • Over reactive

  • Emotional immaturity

  • Lack of trust

  • overworked adrenal glands (high levels of cortisol)

  • dependency and fear of taking risks

  • Poor balance and coordination

  • Difficulty making friends 

  • Poor posture/weak spinal reflexes

  • ADD

  • ADHD

  • Autism Spectrum

  • Anger or Emotional Outbursts

  • Neurodivergent children will often have a Retained Moro Reflex 

 

How long does it take to integrate a Retained Moro Reflex?

A Retained Moro Reflex is often disguised as part of most neurodivergent diagnoses (ADHD, PDA, ASD etc.) and outwardly shows itself as low or high-level anxiety. Older children who have a Retained Moro Reflex will show to be controlling. It is a very difficult Reflex to Integrate, taking months. When a child has a Retained Moro Reflex, it will affect many aspects of development: physically, mentally and emotionally. 

 

What Method is Used for Integrating Retained Primitive Reflexes/ How do the sessions work?

We use MNRI (Masgutova, Neuro-Sensory-Motor, Reflex Integration). It is easy for you as a parent to learn. First, your child has a 50-minute Reflex Assessment. Then we provide you with a summary document that lists your child’s reflexes and the state of maturity of each one. You then book a block of sessions to learn what you must do to help integrate all the reflexes presented in the assessment. You will see results in a matter of weeks. Seeing progress in your child does not mean the reflex is fully integrated, but it shows your child’s reflex development is progressing, allowing for high-level skills.  

What are the results?

What should I do next?

If you are interested in finding our how your child can benefit book a Retained Reflex Integration Assessment below.