FASCIAPUNCTURE® PATTERN ATLAS
Posterior Compression
When the back of the body becomes the place that carries unresolved load.
Posterior Compression is a clinical pattern in which pressure, compensation, and protective load accumulate through the posterior chain, from the neck to the heels.
PATTERN 08 · CLINICAL DEFINITION
The back becomes the system's load-bearing wall.
When pressure cannot be distributed through the diaphragm, core, pelvis, and anterior chain, the posterior system often absorbs the burden.
Over time this may appear as spinal stiffness, sacral pressure, sciatic-like pain, hamstring tension, calf tightness, and heel pain.
WHAT IT MEANS
Not only back pain. A load-distribution problem.
Posterior Compression describes a state where the posterior side of the body becomes the main place of resistance, protection, and compensation.
The back, sacrum, gluteal region, hamstrings, calves, and heels may feel heavy, stiff, painful, shortened, or compressed. But the deeper question is not only where the pain appears.
In Fasciapuncture®, posterior pain is read as a sign that the body may be carrying pressure, load, or protection that could not be distributed elsewhere.
CLINICAL PRESENTATION
How Posterior Compression may appear
The symptom may appear in one region, but the restriction often travels through the posterior chain.
CLINICAL READING
How we read the posterior chain
Posterior Compression is not read by pain location alone. It is read through load, mobility, pressure, and compensation.
Spinal Mobility
Can the spine unfold, rotate, flex, and extend without protective posterior tension?
02Sacral Pressure
Does the sacrum feel heavy, compressed, guarded, or unable to release?
03Posterior Chain Length
Does tension continue through the gluteal region, hamstrings, calves, or heels?
04Load Distribution
Is the back carrying pressure that the core, pelvis, or anterior chain cannot distribute?
CLINICAL OBSERVATION
What is the posterior chain trying to carry?
The painful area may be posterior, but the reason may not be posterior. A tight back may be holding a collapsed front. A painful sacrum may be protecting an unstable pelvis.
A painful heel may reflect a chain of tension from the lumbar region, hip, knee, ankle, and foot. The back may hurt because it has been carrying what the system could not distribute.
The question is not only: “Where does it hurt?” The better question is: What is the back trying to hold?
CONNECTED PATTERNS
Posterior Compression rarely appears alone
It often connects with core pressure, pelvic fixation, anterior tension, and long-term compensation.
Core Block
When the center cannot transmit pressure, the posterior chain often absorbs the load.
REGIONAL PATTERNPelvic Lock
Pelvic restriction may create sacral pressure, lumbar guarding, and posterior chain overload.
MECHANICAL PATTERNAnterior Chain Lock
When the front of the body shortens, the back may work harder to hold the body upright.
CLINICAL REASONINGCompensation Loop
Posterior pain may be the final link in a long chain of adaptation and load redistribution.
CLINICAL CASES
Clinical cases connected to posterior load
These entries help show how posterior symptoms may connect with lumbar pressure, pelvic restriction, sciatic-like pain, and long-chain tension.
When the Spine Begins to Rise Again
A clinical case of low back pain, postural collapse, abdominal compensation, and visible spinal reorganization.
When the Low Back Was the Last Place to Complain
Acute low back locking after years of lifting, carrying, stocking shelves, and standing for long hours.
When Shin Pain Is Not a Shin Problem
A clinical case showing how persistent shin pain and tibial overload may reflect a deeper pelvic compensation and load-transfer pattern.
When the Body Remembers How to Rest
A five-year follow-up showing how sleep, pain, digestion, blood pressure, tremor, and emotional regulation gradually changed.
CONTINUE LEARNING
Continue exploring posterior load patterns
Posterior Compression is not approached as a local back or leg issue inside the Fasciapuncture® clinical model.
Students learn to read spinal mobility, sacral pressure, pelvic adaptation, posterior chain tension, lower limb transmission, and systemic compensation together.
RELATED CONDITIONS
Symptoms that may connect with Posterior Compression
These pages help reconnect back, sacral, leg, and heel symptoms into one clinical map.
FASCIAPUNCTURE® PATTERN MAP
The painful area may be posterior. The reason may not be posterior.
Posterior Compression reminds us that symptoms often appear where load accumulates, not necessarily where dysfunction begins.
Return to Pattern Map