|
Page 1 of 3
Retained Reflex Syndrome is when – due to some form of stress during pregancy, birth or early infancy (Why are Reflexes Retained? ) – we retain one or more foetal or primitive reflexes, which have an
adverse impact on our ability to learn and interract with the world
around us.
I believe that RRS is at the root of many childhood
disorders such as ADHD, dyspraxia and dyslexia, which are merely labels
for a group of symptoms, and which have in common neuro-developmental
delay, but with no consensus as to what is the cause.
Looking at RSS in detaiL
We are born with a whole range of reflexes – a set of instinctive,
involuntary reactions to a certain stimulus. These reflexes have
evolved over centuries to aid our passage from the womb, to protect us
from harm in our vulnerable early months, and to provide rudimentary
training for later voluntary skills.
Most of us have witnessed the Palmar reflex, the
infant grasp, where a light touch to the newborn’s palm will prompt him
to grasp your finger. By a few months of age, this reflex should
‘inhibit’, or fall away, making way for the pincer grip, where an
object is held between the thumb and forefinger.
If all goes according to nature’s plan, all the
foetal and primitive reflexes follow a similar pattern. They initiate
in the uterus, become integrated into the neural system, laying down
the pattern for future controllable actions and responses, and then
inhibit when it’s time to move on to the next developmental stage.
Nearly all these early reflexes should inhibit by the time the baby is
one year old.
Imagine that your Palmar reflex is retained, however.
The lack of pincer grip would affect your ability to hold a pencil and
have an impact on your manual dexterity. What’s more, the newborn’s
connection between hand and mouth movement would fail to dissipate,
affecting your speech, and prompting you to make mouth movements when
writing.
It’s important to realise that these early reflexes
are located in the most primitive area of the brain, the brain stem,
and operate involuntarily. We simply cannot control them. As we
develop, the higher parts of the brain – the cortex, responsible for
thinking and reasoning, and the midbrain, the organisation centre of
the motor and sensory systems – take over the functions of the
primitive reflexes. These functions are then transformed into responses
and actions that can be consciously controlled or modified.
If the primitive reflexes fail to inhibit, however,
the more sophisticated neural structures of the brain, along with the
postural (adult) reflexes, cannot develop properly. The normal
development of motor and processing skills and integration of the left
and right sides of the brain are affected. The child is stuck with
immature responses to his environment. “Act your age!” may literally be
an impossibility for him.
I believe that Retained Reflex Syndrome may affect
75% of the UK population. It doesn’t mean we all display behavioural
problems, as most of us learn to compensate and mask our difficulties.
But the profound psychological impact of living with these reflexes
cannot be underestimated. Under stress, and as we get older, it can get
more and more difficult to keep our volatile emotions under control.
What is RSS - Impact of RSS - Examples of RSS
|