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Apex Nursing

Reference — Neonatal

Newborn Reflexes Reference

Primitive reflexes confirm an intact newborn nervous system — each has a way to elicit it, an age it should disappear, and a meaning when it is absent, asymmetric, or persists too long.

Educational use only. Abnormal, absent, or asymmetric reflexes are reported for provider evaluation. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Reflex Table

ReflexHow to ElicitNormal ResponseDisappears By
Moro (startle)Sudden head-drop motion or loud noiseSymmetric arm extension and abduction, then flexion and cry4–6 months
RootingStroke the cheek or corner of mouthHead turns toward stimulus, mouth opens3–4 months
SuckingPlace nipple or gloved finger in mouthRhythmic, coordinated suckingAround 4 months (becomes voluntary)
Palmar graspPress finger into the palmFingers curl and grip3–4 months
Plantar graspPress at the base of the toesToes curl downward8–10 months
BabinskiStroke lateral sole from heel upwardToes fan with big-toe dorsiflexion (positive is normal in infancy)By about 12 months
Tonic neck (fencing)Turn the head to one side while supineArm and leg extend on the face side; opposite side flexes4–6 months
SteppingHold upright with soles touching a surfaceAlternating stepping movements1–2 months
Galant (trunk incurvation)Stroke along one side of the spine, proneTrunk curves toward the stroked side1–2 months

What Abnormalities Suggest

Absent or weak

A globally absent reflex in a term newborn suggests CNS depression — sedating medications, hypoxic injury, or prematurity. An absent Moro is always significant.

Asymmetric

One-sided Moro or grasp points to a focal problem: clavicle fracture or brachial plexus injury (Erb palsy) are the classic causes.

Persistent

Primitive reflexes that persist well beyond their disappearance age raise concern for neurologic abnormality such as cerebral palsy — flag for developmental follow-up.

NCLEX Pearls

  • An asymmetric Moro after a difficult delivery: think clavicle fracture or brachial plexus injury.
  • A positive Babinski is normal in infants — the same finding in an adult is pathologic.
  • Rooting and sucking are feeding reflexes — weak ones predict feeding difficulty before the first poor feed.
  • Know the big disappearance ages: stepping 1–2 mo, rooting 3–4 mo, Moro and tonic neck 4–6 mo.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) · Neonatal Resuscitation Program (NRP) · AWHONN. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →