FASCIAPUNCTURE® PATTERN ATLAS
Core Block
When the center cannot transmit, the whole body begins to compensate.
Core Block is the central transmission pattern of Fasciapuncture® — where the center of the body loses its ability to transmit pressure, breath, movement, and regulation.
PATTERN 12 · CLINICAL DEFINITION
The center becomes the place where pressure stops moving.
When the diaphragm, abdomen, lumbar region, pelvis, and deep fascial layers stop working as one coordinated system, the body may still move, but movement no longer passes freely through the center.
Breath, abdominal pressure, pelvic coordination, lumbar load, recovery, and nervous system regulation may all depend on whether the center can adapt.
WHAT IT MEANS
Not only abdominal tension. The central axis of transmission.
Core Block describes a clinical state where the center of the body no longer transmits pressure, breath, movement, and adaptation smoothly.
The diaphragm, abdomen, lumbar region, pelvis, and deep fascial layers may stop working as one coordinated system. The body may still move, but movement no longer passes freely through the center.
In Fasciapuncture®, Core Block is not understood as a simple weakness of the core muscles. It is read as a central loss of transmission.
WHY THE CENTER MATTERS
The center links breath, pressure, pelvis, and regulation
Core Block becomes important because many distant symptoms may reflect a loss of central adaptability.
CLINICAL PRESENTATION
How Core Block may appear
Symptoms may appear in the abdomen, back, pelvis, breath, posture, or nervous system — but the pattern often belongs to the center.
Shallow Breathing
Breathing may remain high, restricted, or unable to descend into the trunk.
Abdominal Pressure
The abdomen may feel full, tight, blocked, guarded, or unable to soften.
Low Back Heaviness
The lumbar region may carry pressure that the center cannot distribute.
Pelvic Restriction
The pelvis may lose coordination when breathing and abdominal pressure cannot transmit.
Difficulty Relaxing
The body may remain alert because the center cannot release internal pressure.
Poor Recovery
Fatigue, postural collapse, and low resilience may reflect central transmission loss.
CLINICAL READING
How we read the central transmission system
Core Block is not read by one location alone. It is read by whether breath, pressure, movement, and regulation can pass through the body’s midline.
Diaphragm Mobility
Can breathing descend, soften the center, and create space through the trunk?
02Abdominal Pressure
Does pressure accumulate in the abdomen, lumbar region, pelvis, or thoracic cage?
03Pelvic Transmission
Can the pelvis receive and redistribute movement, load, and pressure from the center?
04System Adaptability
Does the nervous system settle when the center softens, or does the body remain alert?
CLINICAL OBSERVATION
The core is not only muscular. It is a pressure and regulation system.
When the center cannot transmit, the whole body compensates. The neck tightens, the back compresses, the pelvis stiffens, the breath rises, and the nervous system may remain alert.
This is why Core Block often sits at the center of many other patterns. It is the place where breath, pressure, movement, recovery, and regulation meet.
The question is not only: “Where is the tension?” The better question is: Can the center transmit?
CONNECTED PATTERNS
Core Block is the central node of the Pattern Map
Many Fasciapuncture® patterns become clearer when the center is understood as a transmission system.
Upper Exit Block
When pressure cannot move through the center, the neck, jaw, head, and shoulders may tighten.
POSTERIOR LOADPosterior Compression
When the center cannot distribute load, the back and posterior chain may absorb it.
DOWNWARD COMPENSATIONPelvic Lock
When central pressure cannot transmit downward, the pelvis and sacrum may lock.
LONG-TERM ADAPTATIONCompensation Loop
When the center stays blocked, the body may continue building new layers of compensation.
SYSTEM PATTERNSystem Exhaustion
Long-term central restriction may reduce recovery capacity and increase systemic fatigue.
REGULATION PATTERNHormonal Dysregulation
Sleep, stress, pelvic regulation, and recovery may reflect the body’s regulatory environment.
NEURO-FASCIAL PATTERNNeuro-Fascial Irritation
Tissue pressure, restricted glide, and system overload may increase nervous system sensitivity.
ANTERIOR HOLDINGAnterior Chain Lock
The front of the body may shorten around core pressure and protective posture.
CLINICAL CASES
Clinical cases connected to the center
These entries help show how abdominal pressure, breathing, lumbar load, pelvic restriction, and systemic regulation may shift together.
When the Body Stops Leaking
A menopause-related sweating case showing how abdominal tension, breathing restriction, sleep disturbance, and systemic regulation may shift together.
When the Spine Begins to Rise Again
A low back pain case showing how postural collapse, abdominal compensation, posterior shortening, and loss of vertical support may reorganize.
When the Concrete Lifted from Her Neck
A chronic headache case showing how neck pressure, tinnitus, thoraco-abdominal tension, and lower limb swelling may belong to the same systemic pressure pattern.
When Sciatic Pain Was Not Only the Disc
A clinical case showing how chronic sciatic pain may persist when the body remains organized around posterior compression, pelvic compensation, movement restriction, and long-term protection.
When the Body Could Stand Again
A chronic right foot pain case showing how instability, abdominal pressure, spinal compensation, and loss of central support may overload the foot as a final stabilizing point.
CONTINUE LEARNING
Continue exploring central transmission patterns
In Fasciapuncture® training, the core is not taught only as abdominal strength. Students learn to read diaphragm mobility, abdominal pressure, pelvic coordination, lumbar load, breathing depth, and autonomic regulation together.
Core Block connects especially with the foundations of pattern recognition, clinical perception, systemic fascial dysregulation, lumbar-pelvic reasoning, and the clinical case library.
RELATED CONDITIONS
Symptoms that may connect with Core Block
These pages help reconnect breathing, abdomen, lumbar, pelvic, fatigue, and stress symptoms into one clinical map.
FASCIAPUNCTURE® PATTERN MAP
Do not isolate the abdomen. Read the center that transmits the system.
Core Block helps us understand abdominal pressure, low back pain, pelvic restriction, fatigue, stress holding, and systemic regulation through the body’s central transmission axis.
Return to Pattern Map