Spinal Galant Reflex: Signs, Symptoms, and What It Means for Children
By: Dr. Kimberly Day, OTD, BCP, CIMI-2, CPRCS, PMH-C, PCES, ECHM
The Spinal Galant reflex is one of the “primitive” reflexes (early reflexes) that can influence movement, posture, and sensory processing when it remains active beyond infancy. Retained reflexes are reflexes that continue past when they are expected to integrate developmentally.
When this reflex is retained, certain movement patterns or sensitivities may appear during daily activities.
What is the Spinal Galant reflex?
The Spinal Galant reflex is triggered by stimulation along one side of the lower back. In infancy, it helps with early movement and development.
As the nervous system matures, this reflex should integrate. When it remains active, it can influence posture, attention, tactile processing (such as clothing sensitivity), and sensory regulation.
Signs of a retained Spinal Galant reflex
A retained Spinal Galant reflex may be associated with:
- Bedwetting or difficulty with toileting routines
- Sensitivity to clothing, especially waistbands
- Difficulty sitting still or maintaining posture
- Core weakness or poor trunk stability
- Challenges with attention or focus in seated tasks
These patterns may show up most clearly in school settings or transitions.
Functional impact in daily life
When this reflex remains active, it may affect:
- Classroom attention and endurance
- Toileting independence and routines
- Sleep comfort and regulation
- Coordination and posture during learning tasks
- Regulation
- Executive Function- initiation, sustained focus, and completion fo tasks
How Sunny Day Therapy’s occupational therapy can help
Our Occupational Therapy look at how retained reflexes interact with sensory processing, motor control, and environment.
Intervention may include:
- Targeted movement activities
- Sensory regulation supports
- Core and postural strengthening activities
- Environmental and routine adaptations
Related reading
👉 Learn foundational concepts: Reflexes in Children: What They Are and Why They Matter
👉 Explore OT approach: How Occupational Therapy Helps Integrate Primitive Reflexes
