FASCIAPUNCTURE® PATTERN ATLAS

Pelvic Lock

When the body loses its ability to transfer load through the pelvis.

Pelvic Lock is a biomechanical transmission pattern in which the pelvis loses mobility, adaptability, and rotational freedom, forcing the lumbar spine, sacrum, hips, and lower limbs to compensate.

PATTERN 09 · CLINICAL DEFINITION

The pelvis becomes a fixed bridge.

When the pelvis can no longer adapt during walking, breathing, rotation, and weight transfer, the body begins to redistribute load elsewhere.

Over time this may appear as sacral pressure, low back pain, hip restriction, groin tension, gait asymmetry, and lower-limb compensation.

WHAT IT MEANS

Not only a pelvis problem. A transmission problem.

Pelvic Lock describes a state where the pelvis no longer adapts fluidly during walking, breathing, bending, rotation, or weight transfer. Instead of remaining dynamic, the pelvic system becomes guarded, compressed, rotated, or fixed.

In this pattern, the pelvis may lose its role as a moving bridge between the spine and the legs. The result is often compensation through the lumbar spine, sacrum, hips, groin, abdomen, gluteal region, or lower limbs.

CLINICAL PRESENTATION

How Pelvic Lock may appear

The pain may appear in the low back, hips, sacrum, abdomen, or legs, but the restriction often belongs to the pelvic transmission system.

Sacral heaviness Pelvic pressure Low back pain Hip restriction Groin tension Buttock pain Sciatica-like pain Walking asymmetry Difficulty standing on one leg Abdominal pressure Pelvic floor tension Emotional holding

CLINICAL OBSERVATION

What happens when the bridge stops moving?

The pelvis is not only a base. It is a moving bridge between the spine and the legs.

When the pelvis loses mobility, the lumbar spine often stiffens, the sacrum becomes compressed, the hips become restricted, and the legs begin to compensate.

The question is not only: “Where is the pelvic pain?” The better question is: Can the pelvis still transfer movement and pressure?

CONTINUE LEARNING

Continue exploring pelvic transmission patterns

Pelvic Lock is not approached as a local pelvic or lumbar problem inside the Fasciapuncture® clinical model.

Students learn to read pelvic mobility, sacral pressure, abdominal regulation, gait asymmetry, hip-chain transmission, and lower-limb compensation together.

RELATED CONDITIONS

Symptoms that may connect with Pelvic Lock

These pages help reconnect pelvic, lumbar, sacral, abdominal, and lower-limb symptoms into one clinical map.

FASCIAPUNCTURE® PATTERN MAP

The painful area may be below the pelvis. The reason may begin within it.

Pelvic Lock reminds us that efficient movement depends not only on strength, but on the body's ability to transfer load, rotation, and pressure through the center.

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