FASCIAPUNCTURE® CONDITION ATLAS
Pain Is Where the Body Speaks
Conditions are the doorway. Patterns reveal how the body organizes tension, pressure, protection, breathing, and regulation beneath the symptom.
ATLAS DASHBOARD
Choose a doorway into the clinical map
Pain & Movement
Neck, shoulder, back, hip, sciatica, heel and foot pain.
02Regulation & Recovery
Sleep, stress, fatigue, digestion, hormonal symptoms, fertility.
03Head & Sensory
Headache, dizziness, tinnitus, jaw tightness, facial tension.
04Clinical Cases
See how patterns become visible in real bodies.
FOUNDATIONAL PATTERN
Global Protective State
The mind may know the danger has passed. The body may still be protecting.
Before symptoms separate into pain, sleep, digestion, fatigue, anxiety, or tension, the body may already be organized around vigilance, protection, and adaptation.
Explore Global Protective State →Symptom → Protective State → Pattern → Case
A symptom may be where the patient feels it. A protective state helps us understand why the system has not yet felt safe enough to let go.
01 — PAIN & MOVEMENT
When pain reflects compensation
Pain may appear locally, but the body often organizes protection, pressure, posture, and movement through larger regional chains.
NECK & UPPER AXIS
Where head, neck, shoulder and sensory symptoms often begin to connect
Neck Pain
Neck pain is not always only a neck problem. Neck tension may affect breathing, head pressure, sleep, jaw function, and upper-body regulation.
Shoulder Pain
Shoulder pain often belongs to a larger chain. The shoulder may reflect scapular, cervical, thoracic, and fascial chain imbalance.
UPPER LIMB
When arm, elbow, wrist and hand symptoms belong to the whole chain
Arm Numbness
Arm numbness is not always only a nerve problem. It may reflect cervical tension, upper exit restriction, scapular lock, thoracic limitation, and neuro-fascial irritation.
Elbow Pain
Elbow pain is not always an elbow problem. It may come from scapular restriction, forearm fascial density, gripping compensation, or upper limb chain tension.
Wrist & Hand Pain
Wrist and hand pain may be the distal expression of a chain. Symptoms may reflect forearm tension, upper exit restriction, repetitive use, or neuro-fascial irritation.
Carpal Tunnel
Carpal tunnel is not always only a local compression. Persistent numbness may involve the wrist, forearm, neck, shoulder blade, and thoracic outlet together.
Tennis Elbow
Tennis elbow may reflect more than tendon irritation. Forearm fascial tension, gripping overload, shoulder blade restriction, and compensation may all participate.
LUMBAR & PELVIS
Where pelvic organization, spinal load and leg symptoms often meet
Low Back Pain
Low back pain may be the final place to complain. It may come from pelvic pressure, anterior restriction, posterior compression, or compensation.
Hip Pain
Hip pain often reflects pelvic organization. Hip discomfort may involve pelvic tension, anterior chain restriction, gait compensation, or neuro-fascial irritation.
Sciatic Pain
Sciatic-type pain is not always only nerve pain. It may be a chain reaction through lumbar, pelvic, and leg fascia.
LOWER LIMB
When knee, calf, ankle and foot symptoms reveal pressure redistribution
Knee Pain
The knee may be carrying pressure from above and below. Knee pain may reflect pelvic imbalance, walking compensation, posterior chain tension, foot mechanics, or load redistribution.
Heel & Foot Pain
Heel pain is often the end of a chain. It may reflect gait compensation, posterior chain tension, pelvic imbalance, or pressure redistribution.
Foot Expansion
The foot may hurt because it can no longer spread pressure. Toe tension may reflect tight toe spaces, forefoot compression, protective gripping, posterior chain tension, or loss of pressure distribution.
02 — REGULATION & RECOVERY
When the system cannot recover
Some symptoms are not only mechanical. They may reflect how the body regulates stress, sleep, breath, pressure, fatigue, and internal safety.
Sleep Disorders
Sleep changes when the system cannot settle. Sleep may become light, fragmented, or difficult to enter when the body cannot down-regulate.
Stress & Anxiety
Emotional tension often has a body pattern. Breathing, fascia, pressure, and protective contraction may all participate.
Chronic Fatigue
Fatigue is not always lack of energy. It may reflect a body that can no longer recover from long-term adaptation.
Abdominal Pressure & Digestion
Digestive pressure may belong to the center. Diaphragm restriction, abdominal fascia, autonomic tension, and stress regulation may contribute.
Hormonal Imbalance
Hormonal symptoms do not always begin with hormones. Sleep, fatigue, emotional tension, abdominal pressure, and pelvic patterns may coexist.
Fertility & PMA Support
Fertility support is also a regulation question. Fasciapuncture® approaches fertility through pelvic fascia, stress load, breathing, and systemic balance.
03 — HEAD & SENSORY EXPERIENCE
When the head reflects body tension
Head, face, jaw, dizziness, and sensory symptoms may reflect upper cervical tension, cranial fascial pressure, jaw-neck restriction, and autonomic load.
Headache
Headache is not always only a head problem. It may relate to cervical tension, cranial fascial pressure, jaw restriction, breathing disturbance, or autonomic overload.
Vertigo & Dizziness
Dizziness may reflect upper-axis disturbance. Cervical fascia, upper thoracic tension, breathing, and sensory regulation may all participate.
Tinnitus
Tinnitus is not always only an ear problem. Cranio-cervical tension, jaw pressure, autonomic activation, or upper-body fascial restriction may contribute.
Jaw Tightness
Jaw tightness often belongs to the neck. Jaw symptoms may connect with neck fascia, facial tension, emotional load, and upper-body pressure.
Facial Tension
Face tension is not always the problem. Facial tightness may reflect deeper cranio-cervical fascial restriction.
Trigeminal Neuralgia
Facial nerve pain is not always only a nerve problem. It may relate to cranial fascial tension, jaw-neck restriction, upper cervical pressure, and neuro-fascial irritation.
CLINICAL EVIDENCE
Cases are where the map becomes visible
Clinical cases show how symptoms, patterns, and visible change connect.
Four Years After Surgery, the Body Began to Move Again
Four years after lumbar surgery, movement remained guarded and restricted. As scar-related protection changed, mobility and pain improved throughout the body.
When Breathing Becomes Quiet
Condition: Sleep, anxiety, head pressure, systemic regulation.
Read Case →
From Neck Tension to System Release
Condition: neck tension, thyroid regulation, systemic fascia response.
Read Case →
When the Abdomen Finally Let Go
Condition: groin pain, sacroiliac tension, shallow breathing, and post-surgical fascial restriction.
Read Case →When Shin Pain Is Not a Shin Problem
The painful tibia was not necessarily the beginning. It may have been the endpoint of failed load transfer.
RELATED REFLECTIONS
Exploring the Origins of Protection
Global Protective State rarely appears suddenly. It develops through adaptation, compensation, loss of recovery, and repeated exposure to stress.
The Modern Body Is Not Weak — It Is Overloaded
Pain is often the last thing to appear, not the first. A reflection on adaptation, compensation, overload, and modern life.
When Rest Feels Unsafe
Burnout is not a failure to rest. It is a loss of the capacity to feel safe while resting.
Modern Life: Able to Move, Unable to Rest
Many people retain the ability to perform while gradually losing the ability to recover.
Symptoms as Warnings, Not Failures
Symptoms are often requests for adjustment, not evidence of failure.
When “Correct” Becomes Compensation
Comfort may reveal more about regulation than correctness ever can.
CONTINUE THE MAP
Your symptom may be the visible part of a deeper pattern.
Fasciapuncture® offers a way to read pain and systemic symptoms through fascia, pressure, movement, breathing, and regulation.
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