The human body does not experience injury, surgery, or mechanical stress in isolation.
Each structural event — from a childhood fall to a surgical procedure to a repetitive occupational load — generates a compensatory response that reorganizes tension, alters movement strategy, and redistributes mechanical force across the entire system.
Over a lifetime, these adaptations accumulate into a unique structural signature that precedes and underlies a wide range of chronic presentations including persistent pain, fatigue, hormonal dysregulation, and neurological symptoms.
The human body does not experience injury, surgery, or mechanical stress in isolation.
Each structural event — from a childhood fall to a surgical procedure to a repetitive occupational load — generates a compensatory response that reorganizes tension, alters movement strategy, and redistributes mechanical force across the entire system.
Over a lifetime, these adaptations accumulate into a unique structural signature that precedes and underlies a wide range of chronic presentations including persistent pain, fatigue, hormonal dysregulation, and neurological symptoms.