How to Read the Lateral View Without Chasing the Wrong Segment
The sagittal view gets easier to explain when you compare segment angle and displacement together, then decide whether you are looking at a true local driver or a compensation from somewhere else in the chain.
The lateral view gets misread when you focus on the biggest angle and assume that segment is the main problem. In Biotonix, the better question is whether that landmark is actually displaced from the vertical axis or simply reacting to another segment above or below it.
That matters most in the full consultation workflow, where the report, corrective logic, and patient explanation all depend on stronger interpretation, not just stronger screenshots.
Big idea: do not read angle alone and do not read displacement alone. The useful interpretation comes from the relationship between the two.
Three Practical Takeaways
- 1Start global. Read the plumb line and whole-body pattern before you zoom in on one flagged segment.
- 2Compare angle and displacement together. That is what helps you separate a local driver from a compensation.
- 3Explain the driver, not the loudest visual. Patients understand corrective plans faster when you connect posture findings to mechanical stress and chain behavior.
Re-read one lateral-view report before you change the exercise plan.
Take one patient with a clear forward pattern and ask a better question: is this segment truly leading, or is it following a shift from the trunk, pelvis, hip, knee, or ankle?
That small interpretation step usually gives you a more confident explanation and a more targeted corrective sequence.
Try it with a consultation