The spine does not move alone. Every vertebral segment sits inside a fascial envelope - a three-dimensional web of connective tissue that has to hydrate, glide, and re-tension for a SpinalSync correction to hold. MyoSync is the layer that addresses the envelope. Delivered in the same session, directed by the same scan.
The standard anatomical textbook has historically treated fascia as the packaging - the layer of "connective tissue" drawn in faded grey around the muscles, nerves, and bones that appear to be doing the real work. That picture is wrong.
Fascia is a continuous, three-dimensional, hydrated, innervated, and contractile tissue that transmits mechanical force across the entire body. It has its own sensory neurons. It remodels in response to load. It guards in response to pain. And it is the layer that decides whether your spinal correction holds for four hours or four months.
A SpinalSync correction is a mechanical event at a single vertebral segment. The correction has to land through the surrounding fascia, and the resulting tonal balance has to be stable enough for the segment to rest in its new position without being pulled back by the old fascial pattern.
When the scan flags sEMG asymmetry above a threshold or thermographic asymmetry above 0.4°C, MyoSync is deployed before the SpinalSync pulse, in the same session. The correction lands into a prepared tissue envelope instead of a guarded one.
Sports massage and physiotherapy both have their place, and we refer to both for the right presentations. But they are not MyoSync. The differences matter - especially if you are a long-time massage-therapy regular trying to decide whether The Sync duplicates what you already get.
We do not sell MyoSync as a 60-minute session. We do not offer it as an add-on. If you want a therapeutic massage - and many members do - we are happy to refer you to the partner therapists we trust in Singapore and Bali.
A scan-directed, zone-specific fascial release that takes place inside your standard 30-minute Sync session - only when the scan pattern calls for it. Included in the First Sync price. Never upsold.
The clinician does not choose MyoSync by feel. The CellSync channel pattern decides - and the clinician's discretion is how aggressively to apply it, not whether.
MyoSync is a triad - instrument-assisted soft-tissue mobilisation (IASTM), skilled manual release, and breath-paced neural retraining - chosen by the clinician based on which CellSync channel flagged.
Stainless-steel tool, contoured to the paraspinal zone. Applied in short strokes across the restricted tissue. Between 3 and 6 minutes per zone. Creates controlled micro-vascular response; the body handles the rest.
Thumb and fulcrum work at the trigger points identified by palpation during IASTM. Measured, not aggressive. 90 seconds to 2 minutes per trigger point. Releases the guarded tissue without stimulating a defensive response.
Two minutes of patient-paced breath-work while the clinician holds the released zone. Teaches the nervous system that the new tissue state is safe. This is why MyoSync compounds across sessions - you are retraining the guarding response, not just the tissue.
Fascia does not respect anatomical textbook boundaries. It runs in continuous chains from foot to skull. When one chain is tight, a different chain two feet away carries the load. The MyoSync decision is which chain to target, not which muscle.
Tom Myers' fascial-chain framework (Anatomy Trains) identified six continuous meridians of fascia running across the body. MyoSync uses this model as the clinician's decision tree - the priority zone in the spine is almost always downstream of a chain issue somewhere else.
No. MyoSync is triggered by your CellSync scan - on roughly 30% of sessions across our Paragon audit. If your scan is clean on all four trigger channels, we skip MyoSync and go straight to the SpinalSync correction. Same session price, same session length, just less of it needed.
Mildly uncomfortable at the trigger points - more than a massage, less than a deep tissue work. The discomfort is the point: we are asking the nervous system to release a guarded pattern. Most members describe it as "good pain". If it ever moves past 4/10, tell your clinician and we back off.
No - not because we want to up-sell, but because MyoSync out of context is just a 6-minute IASTM session, which is not a useful product. If you want fascial work in isolation, we'll refer you to a trusted massage therapist. If you want it wrapped inside the full Sync method, book a regular session.
Sometimes, yes - mild petechiae (small reddish dots) can appear at IASTM sites. They fade within 48 hours. It does not mean the work was done wrong. If you bruise easily, tell your clinician and we adapt the tool pressure.
Yes, with positioning adapted per trimester. We do not apply IASTM over the abdomen at any point in pregnancy. Paraspinal and pelvic zones are routinely treated through all three trimesters. Your clinician will adjust.
MyoSync is not a separate visit, a separate charge, or a separate decision. It is the part of your Sync session that happens when the scan says it should.