Zink's Compensatory Patterns
OMM · Fascial Patterns

Zink's Compensatory
Patterns

Four letters. Four junctions. One pattern that shows up on every OMM clinical practice.

scroll to learn the pattern
Challenge Yourself
A 32-year-old healthy woman presents for a wellness visit. Fascial screening reveals alternating rotation preferences at the four transitional zones. At the OA junction, the preferred rotation is:
Yes. In Zink's common compensatory pattern, the OA junction rotates LEFT. The full sequence is L-R-L-R from top to bottom. ~80% of healthy people show this pattern.
Good instinct · rotation direction matters here. Think of it like marching: you always start with the LEFT foot. The OA junction starts LEFT in the common pattern. Common = L-R-L-R. OA = Left.
Careful · that's a trap. The key word is "alternating." If all four zones rotate the same direction, that's non-compensatory, which means pathology (trauma, hospitalized patients). Compensatory patterns always alternate: L-R-L-R or R-L-R-L.
I see the logic, but Zink's patterns describe rotation preference, not restriction. Each junction prefers to rotate one direction more easily. In a healthy person, these preferences alternate. Alternating rotation = compensatory = normal.
Four Letters That Run the Whole Topic
Zink described how fascia rotates at four transitional zones in the spine. In most healthy people, these rotations alternate. That is the pattern you memorize. But there is a reason the body builds it this way, and the next screen is where it stops being four random letters.
MARCHING ORDER
L
R
L
R
L - R - L - R
Left foot first = Common pattern. Right foot first = Uncommon.
*
L-R-L-RMARCHING ORDER: Left-Right-Left-Right. You always start marching with your LEFT foot. Common pattern = marching. Uncommon = starting with the wrong foot (R-L-R-L). = Common pattern (80% of healthy people). Think marching order · left foot first, always alternating.
Common (80%)
L-R-L-R
~80% of healthy adults
OA: Left → CT: Right → TL: Left → LS: Right
"Marching order · left foot first"
Uncommon (20%)
R-L-R-L
~20% of healthy adults
OA: Right → CT: Left → TL: Right → LS: Left
"Started with the wrong foot"
*
BOTH patterns are compensatory · the key feature is alternating rotation. Common vs. uncommon just describes WHICH direction starts at OA. Both are found in healthy people.
Why It Alternates At All
The letters are not random and they are not a rule someone invented. The body alternates for the same reason a stack of blocks alternates: so the thing on top stays balanced over the base.
Start with the picture

Your fascia is a continuous, interconnected web running skull to sacrum, so a rotational bias at one zone does not stay local: it shares tension with its neighbours. Here is how the osteopathic model reads the alternation. If every zone twisted the same direction, those biases would stack, and the head would tend to ride off the midline of the pelvis. Counter-rotate each zone against the one below it instead, and the twists cancel, so the eyes stay level over the base. It is a conceptual model rather than a measured force, but it reframes the four letters: alternation is not the pattern to memorize, it is the body keeping its own twist in balance.

centre of the base LS TL CT OA
Eyes level, weight stacked over the base. Each zone cancels the twist of the one below it. That is why a healthy spine alternates.
On Rounds
You
So I just memorize L-R-L-R and move on?
Attending
You can. You will also forget it by Thursday. Stack four blocks instead. Lean every block the same way and the top one walks off the table. Lean them in opposite directions and the top sits dead centre. That is the whole pattern. In the model, the body alternates so the head stays balanced over the pelvis.
You
So the letters are just the bookkeeping.
Attending
The letters are the receipt. The balancing is the reason. Memorize the receipt if you want the points. Understand the balance and you stop needing to.
Built To Move Fluid
Balance is half the answer. The other half is why an osteopath cares about four fascial twists in the first place: those four zones sit on the body's four fluid pumps.

Zink did not study these zones to win a memorization game. He built them into his respiratory-circulatory model. Each transitional zone sits near one of the four transverse diaphragms, the horizontal fascial layers the model treats as fluid pumps for venous and lymphatic return. The respiratory diaphragm genuinely drives central venous return with every breath; the model extends the same logic to the other three. Its proposal: for the pumps to move fluid cleanly the fascia passing through them should be balanced, and alternating tension is balanced tension. So when a zone locks and the alternation breaks, the model holds that the diaphragm at that level stops gliding and fluid pools behind it.

OA CT TL LS fluid returns upward through each pump
OA · tentorium cerebelliThe cranial diaphragm, paired with the occipitoatlantal region and linked to venous drainage from the head.
CT · thoracic inletThe gateway for everything draining out of the head, neck, and arms. Free this first, or the rest backs up.
TL · respiratory diaphragmThe big one. Every breath drops it and drives the central fluid pump.
LS · pelvic diaphragmThe floor. Returns venous blood and lymph up from the legs and pelvis.
*
This is the part of the model the boards lean on lightly and clinicians lean on hard. You will be tested on the pattern. You will use the reason: a balanced, alternating fascial system keeps the four pumps gliding, and a broken one is where fluid stalls.
Medically reviewed by Fatima Ali, DO and Kaitlyn Cocuzzo, MD · Last updated July 1, 2026 at 10:03 PM ET
Bone Wizardry is an independent educational resource for visual learning in the medical sciences. It is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by any licensing or examination board, contains no real or recalled examination questions, and does not guarantee any educational or examination outcome.
×