FASCIAPUNCTURE® CONDITION MAP

Sciatica

A fascia-based view of sciatic pain, lumbar pressure, pelvic compensation, gluteal tension, and posterior chain overload.

CORE READING

Sciatica is not always a nerve problem.

Pain may travel along the leg, but the underlying pattern often involves lumbar pressure, pelvic compensation, deep gluteal tension, abdominal restriction, or overload within the posterior fascial chain.

CLINICAL VIEW

The pain travels down the leg. But the pattern may begin in the system.

Sciatica is often understood as irritation or compression of the sciatic nerve. This may be true in some cases, and medical evaluation is important when symptoms are severe, progressive, or associated with neurological signs.

But clinically, sciatic-like pain may also reflect a larger fascial and mechanical pattern: lumbar pressure, pelvic compensation, deep gluteal tension, posterior chain overload, abdominal restriction, or systemic exhaustion.

In Fasciapuncture®, we do not only ask where the pain travels. We ask what pathway the body can no longer release.

COMMON PRESENTATIONS

How sciatic pain may appear

The leg may speak, but the pattern may include the low back, pelvis, hip, gluteal region, posterior chain, and core.

Buttock pain
Posterior thigh pain
Calf tension
Foot symptoms
Walking difficulty
Pain when sitting
Pain when bending forward
Lumbar pressure
Pelvic restriction
Hip tightness
Leg heaviness
Radiating discomfort
CLINICAL READING

How we read sciatica clinically

Sciatic pain is not read only by its path. It is read by how the whole lower system distributes load.

01

Lumbar Pressure

Is the low back carrying compression, heaviness, disc-related tension, or protective stiffness?

02

Pelvic Compensation

Is the pelvis rotated, restricted, unstable, or unable to adapt during walking and bending?

03

Deep Gluteal Tension

Is the buttock region holding protective tension around the deep hip and posterior fascial layers?

04

Posterior Chain Load

Does tension continue through the hamstrings, calf, heel, or foot as one long functional chain?

CLINICAL INSIGHT

Sciatica is not only about a nerve. It is about the path the body can no longer release.

A painful leg may reflect a compressed lumbar region, a protective pelvis, a tense gluteal field, a blocked core, or a posterior chain that has carried too much for too long.

The question is not only: “Where does the pain go?” The better question is: “Where does the system stop releasing?”

RELATED CONDITIONS

Symptoms that may connect with sciatica

These pages help reconnect sciatic pain with lumbar, pelvic, posterior chain, and systemic patterns.

TRAINING CONNECTION

Sciatic pain becomes readable when the chain becomes visible.

In Fasciapuncture® training, sciatica is not taught only as a nerve pathway. It is explored through lumbar pressure, pelvic orientation, deep gluteal fascia, posterior chain transmission, movement testing, and systemic recovery.

This topic connects especially with Module 2, Module 8, Module 9, and Module 10.

Explore Training →
FASCIAPUNCTURE® CLINICAL MAP

The leg may hurt because the system can no longer distribute load.

Fasciapuncture® approaches sciatic pain through fascia, pressure, compensation, posterior chain overload, and clinical pattern recognition.

Explore Posterior Compression