why does our knee have a reflex to kick when you get hit in the kneecap? any other reflexes we have like this?

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why does our knee have a reflex to kick when you get hit in the kneecap? any other reflexes we have like this?

In: Biology

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Anonymous 0 Comments

They exist to allow us to respond faster than we could if we had to stop to think about it. They work by essentially allowing the nerve that senses something, to fire a pre-programmed message to the muscles, without having to relay the information up to the central nervous system first. So, in the case of the knee one, the patellar reflex, it happens when the tendon is stretched, like in a way it might if your legs give out or something. So, you kick your foot out automatically to try to keep from falling.

There’s a few of them that we have – mostly to oppose forced movement (if your arm is forced in, it reflexes out), including one’s that make our toes curl with pressure to the sole – maybe a holdover from primate ancestry to try to grip a branch.

There are other ones that have to do with infancy to help us survive, that go away after your brain starts to mature. For instance, there’s a reflex that makes baby’s suckle when you tap their chins – which is almost certainly to help them latch on to a nipple so they can feed.

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