Child Development: Difference between revisions
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== Primitive Reflexes == | == Primitive Reflexes == | ||
The primitive reflexes are movement patterns that can be involuntarily elicited in a newborn. They exist to enhance chances of survival. These reflexes should be integrated as the child's motor development matures. The persistence of these reflexes beyond the usual ages of integration is suggestive of ischemic brain injury. Below several of the primitive reflexes, their appearance and integration dates are discussed. | The primitive reflexes are movement patterns that can be involuntarily elicited in a newborn. They exist to enhance chances of survival. These reflexes should be integrated as the child's motor development matures. The persistence of these reflexes beyond the usual ages of integration is suggestive of ischemic brain injury. Below several of the primitive reflexes, their appearance and integration dates are discussed. | ||
'''<u>Rooting reflex:</u>''' | '''<u>Rooting reflex:</u>''' | ||
'''<u></u>'''{{#ev:youtube|V1-sByJrSq0}} | '''<u></u>'''{{#ev:youtube|V1-sByJrSq0}}<ref name= "onlinemedicalvideo">onlinemedicalvideo. Physical exam-Newborn Normal: Primitive reflexes-suck, root. Available from: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Vs7_aHfOy8 [last accessed: 17/06/13]</ref> | ||
|} | |||
'''<u>Palmar Grasp:</u>''' | |||
<br> | |||
'''<u>Plantar grasp:</u>''' | '''<u>Plantar grasp:</u>''' | ||
'''<u></u>'''{{#ev:youtube|BF1j1PXRq-I}} | '''<u></u>'''{{#ev:youtube|BF1j1PXRq-I}} | ||
<u>'''Moro:'''</u> | <u>'''Moro:'''</u> | ||
{{#ev:youtube|NOuuxVqAcqM}} | {{#ev:youtube|NOuuxVqAcqM}} | ||
'''<u>ATNR:</u>''' | '''<u>ATNR:</u>''' | ||
{{#ev:youtube|uXsb7bxTc5g}} | {{#ev:youtube|uXsb7bxTc5g}} |
Revision as of 00:16, 18 June 2013
Original Editor - The Open Physio project.
Top Contributors - Naomi O'Reilly, Siobhán Cullen, Admin, Chelsea Mclene, Oyemi Sillo, Kim Jackson, Lucinda hampton, Tony Lowe, WikiSysop, Simisola Ajeyalemi, 127.0.0.1, Lauren Kwant, Rachael Lowe, Jess Bell, Paule Morbois, Olajumoke Ogunleye, Matt Huey, Scott Buxton, Saeed Dokhnan, Claire Knott, Rucha Gadgil and Amrita Patro
Gross motor activities[edit | edit source]
Activity | Age |
Lifts head to 45° | 2/12 |
Props on forearms in prone | 3/12 |
Rolls over | 5/12 |
Prone on extended arms | 6/12 |
Balance reactions | 6/12 |
No Head lag | 5/12 |
Sitting without support | 6-8/12 |
Pulls to stand | 8-9/12 |
Cruises | 8-9/12 |
Crawls reciprocally | 9/12 |
Stands alone | 11/12 |
Walks alone | 12/12 |
Runs | 18-24/12 |
Walks up and down stairs with handrail | 2 yrs |
Pedals tricycle | 3 yrs |
Walks narrow line | 5 yrs |
Fine motor skills[edit | edit source]
Follows objects with eyes | 1-2/12 |
Grasps objects | 4/12 |
Hand to hand transfers | 5/12 |
Finger feeds | 6/12 |
Objects into container | 12/12 |
Builds 2 block tower | 14/12 |
Helps with dressing | 15/12 |
Builds 6-7 cube tower | 2 yrs |
Uses fork and spoon skilfully | 2.5 yrs |
Holds pencil with adult grasp | 4 yrs |
Colours inside lines | 5 yrs |
Social skills[edit | edit source]
Smiles when stimulated | 1/12 |
Vocalises to self | 6/12 |
Plays peek-a-boo | 8/12 |
Stranger anxiety | 8/12 |
Drinks from cup | 12/12 |
Uses spoon | 13/12 |
2-6 words | 15/12 |
Feeds self fully | 2 yrs |
Bladder and bowel control | 2 yrs |
Has 50+ words, understands 1000+ | 2 yrs |
Undresses | 2.5 yrs |
Gramatically correct speech | 4 yrs |
Fluent | 5 yrs |
Primitive Reflexes[edit | edit source]
The primitive reflexes are movement patterns that can be involuntarily elicited in a newborn. They exist to enhance chances of survival. These reflexes should be integrated as the child's motor development matures. The persistence of these reflexes beyond the usual ages of integration is suggestive of ischemic brain injury. Below several of the primitive reflexes, their appearance and integration dates are discussed.
Rooting reflex:
<ref name= "onlinemedicalvideo">onlinemedicalvideo. Physical exam-Newborn Normal: Primitive reflexes-suck, root. Available from: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Vs7_aHfOy8 [last accessed: 17/06/13]</ref>
|}
Palmar Grasp:
Plantar grasp:
Moro:
ATNR:
Recent Related Research (from Pubmed)[edit | edit source]
Failed to load RSS feed from http://eutils.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/eutils/erss.cgi?rss_guid=1XMgV6jliA8ARN2yDLIfMBSoFqzTslxA7PFp3nPxHIR-jpvU5k|charset=UTF-8|short|max=10: Error parsing XML for RSS
References[edit | edit source]
References will automatically be added here, see adding references tutorial.