FASCIAPUNCTURE® CLINICAL MAP
Clinical Pattern Atlas
Symptoms tell us where. Patterns help us understand why.
The Clinical Pattern Atlas maps how tension, pressure, protection, breathing, posture, fascia, and regulation organize throughout the body.
CLINICAL LANGUAGE
The body organizes itself through patterns.
In Fasciapuncture®, a pattern is not a diagnosis. It is a clinical reading of how tension, pressure, breathing, posture, compensation, and regulation are organized in the body.
Pain may be local, but the organization beneath it is often systemic. The same symptom may arise from different patterns, and the same pattern may appear through different symptoms.
ATLAS NAVIGATION
Four ways to enter the clinical map
The Atlas can be explored through patterns, symptoms, real clinical cases, or practitioner training.
Browse by Pattern
Understand the body’s deeper organization through regulation, pressure, posture, compensation, and tissue adaptation.
Browse by Condition
Begin with symptoms such as pain, fatigue, dizziness, jaw tension, abdominal pressure, or breathing restriction.
Browse by Case
See how patterns become visible through posture, breathing, movement, facial expression, and systemic change.
Enter Training
Learn how Fasciapuncture® practitioners read patterns and choose precise clinical entry strategies.
FOUNDATIONAL STATE
Global Protective State
The mind may know the danger has passed. The body may still be protecting.
A foundational pattern that explains why anxiety, poor sleep, abdominal pressure, fatigue, shallow breathing, and chronic tension often appear together.
Explore Global Protective State →Protection is not the problem.
The problem begins when protection becomes the body’s default state.
CORE CLINICAL PATTERNS
Four central patterns that organize the Atlas
These patterns form the clinical reasoning backbone of the Fasciapuncture® system.
Autonomic Dysregulation
When the nervous system remains in alertness, protection, poor recovery, or difficulty returning to calm.
CENTRAL PRESSURECore Block
When the center loses its ability to transmit pressure, breathing, movement, and regulation.
POSTURAL PROTECTIONAnterior Chain Lock
When the front of the body becomes shortened, guarded, or dominant in posture and protection.
META PATTERNCompensation Loop
The architecture of adaptation — how the body redistributes load, tension, pressure, and protection over time.
I · SYSTEMIC REGULATION PATTERNS
Recovery, autonomic balance, fatigue, and systemic adaptability
Autonomic Dysregulation
Sleep, sweating, vigilance, breathing changes, and difficulty returning to calm.
RECOVERYSystem Exhaustion
When long-term protection reduces recovery, adaptability, and resilience.
HORMONAL LOADHormonal Dysregulation
Patterns where endocrine rhythm, stress load, fatigue, sleep, and regulation overlap.
INFLAMMATORY LOADChronic Inflammatory Overload
When chronic inflammation, fatigue, pain, digestion, skin, and systemic exhaustion appear together.
II · CENTRAL PRESSURE & BREATHING PATTERNS
The central axis where breathing, abdominal pressure, thoracic expansion, and regulation meet
Core Block
A central holding pattern linking breathing, abdomen, lumbar tension, pelvis, and regulation.
ABDOMINAL COREAbdominal Pressure
When abdominal holding influences breathing, posture, digestion, pressure, and recovery.
BREATHING CENTERDiaphragm Restriction
When breath cannot descend and pressure cannot distribute smoothly.
THORAXThoracic Restriction
When the body cannot expand freely through the chest, ribs, upper back, and breathing axis.
III · HEAD & NECK REGULATION PATTERNS
Orientation, jaw-neck tension, cranial pressure, and upper-axis regulation
Upper Exit Block
Restriction around the neck, clavicle, jaw, upper thorax, and cranio-cervical outlet.
CERVICAL AXISCervical Axis Tension
When the head-neck axis loses freedom, orientation, and regulatory flexibility.
CRANIAL SYSTEMCranial Fascial Tension
Head pressure, facial tension, cranial sensitivity, and upper fascial transmission.
JAW & NECKJaw-Neck Lock
When jaw stabilization and cervical guarding reinforce each other.
IV · POSTURAL & COMPENSATION PATTERNS
How the body protects, bends, compresses, shifts, and compensates over time
Anterior Chain Lock
Protective flexion through the neck, chest, abdomen, pelvis, and hip flexors.
BACK CHAINPosterior Compression
Compression through the back line, lumbar region, posterior pelvis, and neck.
SHOULDER GIRDLEScapular Lock
Restriction around the scapula, shoulder blade, ribs, and upper thoracic chain.
PELVIC BASEPelvic Lock
When the pelvis becomes a locked base of compensation, load transfer, and pressure retention.
PELVIC GUARDINGPelvic Protection
When the pelvis becomes a protective field involving guarding, vigilance, internal holding, and regulation.
META PATTERNCompensation Loop
How the body redistributes load, movement, pressure, and protection to preserve function.
CROSS-BODY ADAPTATIONCross Compensation Loop
When tension, load, or protection travels across the midline through diagonal chains, rotation, and gait.
V · NEURO-FASCIAL & TISSUE ADAPTATION PATTERNS
Nerve sensitivity, tissue fixation, scars, irritation, and protective adaptation
Neuro-Fascial Irritation
A pattern where nerve-like symptoms may reflect irritation within fascial corridors, pressure zones, or protective tissue tension.
TISSUE ADAPTATIONScar Restriction Pattern
When a healed scar continues to influence movement, glide, protection, compensation, and pressure transmission.
CONDITIONS × PATTERNS
From symptoms to clinical meaning
Conditions are often the doorway. Patterns help us understand the organization beneath the symptom.
CLINICAL CASES
Where patterns become visible in real bodies
Clinical cases translate the Pattern Atlas into lived experience: posture, breathing, pain, regulation, recovery, and change.
When Breathing Becomes Quiet
A clinical moment where breath, pressure, tension, and nervous system regulation shifted together.
When the Body Stops Leaking
A menopause-related sweating case showing how abdominal tension, breathing restriction, sleep, and regulation may shift together.
When Inflammation Never Truly Rests
A case where fatigue, pain, digestion, skin flare-ups, anxiety, and systemic exhaustion appeared together.
The Foot Was Not the Problem
A case showing how foot pain may reflect a larger posterior chain and pelvic compensation pathway.
Four Years After Surgery, the Body Began to Move Again
A post-lumbar surgery case where restoring movement changed pain across the lower back, shoulder, arm, and knee.
CLINICAL LEARNING
Enter the clinical reasoning system.
The Fasciapuncture® training program teaches practitioners how to read patterns through posture, breathing, palpation, movement, pressure, autonomic signs, and clinical change.
The goal is not to memorize symptoms, but to understand how the body organizes tension — and how precise intervention may help the system reorganize.
- Pattern recognition
- Clinical observation
- Fascial chain reading
- Entry strategy
- Case-based reasoning
FASCIAPUNCTURE® CLINICAL PATTERN ATLAS
