Fascia and 2TLS Treatment of the Upper Limb

$1,500.00

Most upper limb treatment focuses on the rotator cuff, the elbow extensors, or the wrist flexors. The assumption is that the problem is local. The treatment reflects that assumption.

This course starts elsewhere. The upper limb does not operate in isolation. It is part of a continuous fascial network where the joints serve as way stations for fluid movement, and the ligaments and tendons function as afferent highways to the nervous system.

If you treat the subscapularis insertion without addressing its link to the supraspinatus, you overload the transverse humeral ligament. If you mobilize the glenohumeral joint without addressing fascial chain continuity to the lymphatic system, you are moving structure without restoring function.

This course teaches you to treat the upper limb as an integrated fascial system, not a collection of isolated injuries.

Most upper limb treatment focuses on the rotator cuff, the elbow extensors, or the wrist flexors. The assumption is that the problem is local. The treatment reflects that assumption.

This course starts elsewhere. The upper limb does not operate in isolation. It is part of a continuous fascial network where the joints serve as way stations for fluid movement, and the ligaments and tendons function as afferent highways to the nervous system.

If you treat the subscapularis insertion without addressing its link to the supraspinatus, you overload the transverse humeral ligament. If you mobilize the glenohumeral joint without addressing fascial chain continuity to the lymphatic system, you are moving structure without restoring function.

This course teaches you to treat the upper limb as an integrated fascial system, not a collection of isolated injuries.