Because the goal isn’t learning more techniques.
It’s learning how to think clinically.
The MyoSynaptics Learning Portal was built to help clinicians move beyond memorizing protocols and begin understanding why they are doing what they do.
Inside the portal, we focus on the integration of anatomy, fascia, neuroscience, assessment, and clinical application—helping you connect the pieces that influence patient outcomes.
When you understand the relationships between structure, function, and the nervous system, techniques become more purposeful, adaptable, and clinically relevant.
Whether you’re a student, chiropractor, manual therapist, or movement professional, MyoSynaptics is designed to help you build a deeper clinical framework that carries over into every patient interaction.
Join a community dedicated to clinical reasoning, integration, and lifelong learning.
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MyoSynaptics
MyoSynaptics educates Health Care providers on how the Nervous System and Myofascial System work tog
05/29/2026
Inside the MyoSynaptics Learning Portal, members gain access to a growing library of on-demand courses, Clinical Gems, Research Hub discussions, and a community of clinicians dedicated to advancing their understanding of anatomy, fascia, neuroscience, and clinical application.
Designed for practitioners who want to move beyond memorization and develop a deeper framework for assessment, treatment, and clinical reasoning.
Learn deeper. Connect. Apply.
Explore the MyoSynaptics Learning Portal today.
Peripheral nerve entrapments are often overlooked clinically.
Patients may present with:
• burning pain
• numbness or tingling
• weakness
• tension patterns
• movement sensitivity
• radiating symptoms
—but the source is not always the spine.
Inside the MyoSynaptics Peripheral Nerve Entrapment Course, we break down:
• major peripheral nerve pathways
• common upper & lower extremity entrapment sites
• sensory & motor patterns
• clinical anatomy application
• treatment site localization
Designed to help clinicians move beyond memorization into deeper clinical understanding.
Early access is now available through MyoSynaptics.
05/27/2026
Pre-sale access for the MyoSynaptics Peripheral Nerve Entrapment Course is now officially open.
This course was built to help clinicians move beyond memorization and start understanding how peripheral nerves behave clinically:
• common entrapment sites
• sensory + motor presentations
• dermatomes vs peripheral nerve patterns
• fascial relationships
• clinical anatomy application
• treatment site localization
Peripheral nerve dysfunction is often more complex than “pain” or “numbness.”
Understanding where nerves travel, where they become vulnerable, and how surrounding tissues influence symptoms changes the way you assess and treat patients.
If you work with movement, fascia, rehab, neurology, chiropractic, manual therapy, or performance — this course was designed for clinical integration.
COMMENT “NERVE” for a direct link to enroll is pre-sale access and get exclusive savings!
The Peripheral Nervous System is more than memorizing nerves and pathways.
It’s understanding how sensory input, motor output, reflexes, fascia, and movement patterns integrate clinically in real patients.
Inside the upcoming MyoSynaptics PNS Course, we’ll break down:
• dermatomes
• myotomes
• DTRs
• peripheral nerve pathways
• entrapment patterns
• sensory integration
• clinical application and assessment
This course was designed to help clinicians move beyond isolated memorization and begin recognizing meaningful neurological patterns in practice.
Because clinical presentations rarely follow the textbook perfectly.
Launching August 1st.
More details coming soon.
Pain is not always coming from the tissue patients think it is.
This week’s Clinical Gem inside the MyoSynaptics Membership explores the major referral patterns clinicians encounter in practice and why understanding them changes the way you assess and treat complex presentations.
Topics discussed include:
• Myotogenous referral
• Sclerotogenous referral
• Parietal referral
• Visceral referral
• Psychogenic and centrally mediated contributors
Understanding the difference between these patterns can change how you interpret pain, movement compensation, autonomic findings, and patient response to care.
Clinical application. Neurology. Fascia. Sensory integration.
All connected.
Now live inside the member community 💎
MyoSynaptics was built for clinicians who want to think differently.
Not just memorize systems.
Integrate them.
Fascia.
Neuroscience.
Movement.
Sensory processing.
Clinical application.
Inside the Membership:
• Full on-demand course library
• Hands-on in-person intensives
• Exclusive practitioner community
• Clinical Gems
• Research Hub
Learn how structure influences function.
How sensory input changes output.
How integrated systems create better clinical outcomes.
Where fascia meets neuroscience.
Join the Institute at MyoSynaptics.com
This week’s Clinical Gem is now live inside the MyoSynaptics Membership Community.
This case study explores a complex patient presentation involving chronic pain, dystonia, hypertonicity, altered sway patterns, hyperreflexia, and autonomic findings — highlighting the importance of understanding how motor, sensory, and autonomic systems interact in chronic neurological presentations.
Inside this Clinical Gem:
• patient case breakdown
• neurological examination findings
• clinical reasoning process
• sensory-motor integration considerations
• discussion surrounding basal ganglia involvement and compensation patterns
Designed to help clinicians think beyond isolated symptoms and better connect neurological findings across systems.
Join the discussion now inside the membership community at MyoSynaptics.com
This week’s Clinical Gem inside the MyoSynaptics Membership Community explores a unique basal ganglia case presentation and the importance of understanding these circuits beyond textbook movement disorders.
We’ll break down the patient presentation, neurological findings, clinical reasoning process, and how dysfunction within the basal ganglia can influence movement, tone, coordination, autonomic function, and sensory integration in ways that are often overlooked clinically.
Designed for clinicians and students looking to deepen their understanding of applied neuroscience and neurological integration.
Available tomorrow inside the membership community.
Explore the learning portal at MyoSynaptics.com
05/12/2026
The body does not separate systems.
Neither should your treatment.
Fascial tissue is more than structure. It continuously communicates with the nervous system through sensory input, influencing movement, coordination, tissue tone, autonomic regulation, and motor output.
Understanding the relationship between fascia and neural integration allows clinicians to move beyond isolated treatment models and toward more comprehensive clinical application.
Inside the MyoSynaptics Membership, you’ll gain access to:
• On-demand course library
• Clinical integration training
• Exclusive educational content
• Clinician community discussions
• Advanced neuro-fascial concepts and application
Change input. Change output.
Explore the learning portal at MyoSynaptics.com
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1130 Northchase Parkway SE Suite 125
Marietta, GA
30067