If you're diabetic and you've noticed things stopped working in the bedroom, keep reading.
If you've tried the standard pills and they barely got you halfway there โ keep reading.
If your doctor told you erectile dysfunction is just part of having diabetes and you need to accept it โ keep reading.
If you've spent hundreds or thousands on medications that work for non-diabetic men but somehow fail you โ what you're about to learn could change everything.
Over 52% of diabetic men develop erectile dysfunction. Most are told it's an inevitable complication. Something to manage, not reverse.
But this isn't a story about managing. This is a story about a diabetic endocrinologist who discovered why every standard treatment fails diabetic men specifically โ and what actually repairs the damage.
Dr. Thomas Hadley is a 53-year-old endocrinologist with 24 years of clinical experience. He specializes in diabetic care. He counsels men through this exact complication multiple times a week.
He's also Type 2 diabetic. Diagnosed at 47.
Within two years of his diagnosis, despite managing his blood sugar, overhauling his diet, and following every protocol he prescribes to his own patients โ his body failed him in the same way it fails over half of diabetic men.
He couldn't perform with his wife anymore.
"I sit across from men three, four, five times a week and explain what diabetes is doing to their body," Dr. Hadley says. "Then I go home and live with the exact same problem I just counseled someone else through."
His wife Karen, married to him for 21 years, eventually reached her breaking point in a marriage counselor's office.
"I've started accepting that maybe this is just what our marriage looks like from now on."
That sentence broke something in him. Because he knew she was right to feel that way. He'd tried everything available and nothing worked well enough.
Dr. Hadley didn't just casually try one pill. He systematically worked through every pharmaceutical option over nearly three years.
Why? Why do these pills work for most men but consistently fail diabetic men?
That question led Dr. Hadley to a discovery that contradicts what he'd been taught for over two decades.
Here's what the medical establishment gets wrong.
Standard ED medications work by dilating blood vessels. They relax the vessel walls to allow more blood flow. For a man with mild vascular restriction, that's often enough.
But diabetes doesn't cause mild vascular restriction.
Diabetes causes a specific type of damage that dilation cannot fix.
Sustained elevated blood sugar deposits micro-plaque inside the smallest blood vessels in the male body โ the penile arteries. This micro-plaque narrows the vessels from the inside. It stiffens the vessel walls. It degrades the endothelial lining.
On top of that, diabetes damages the nerve pathways responsible for signaling arousal.
You're dealing with clogged, stiffened vessels AND degraded nerve signals simultaneously.
No amount of dilation fixes a clogged pipe. You can open the faucet all the way โ if the pipe behind the wall is corroded and blocked, more pressure doesn't help.
That's why Vi*gra gets a non-diabetic man to 95-100% but only gets a diabetic man to 60-70%. The drug is doing its job. The vessels are too damaged to respond.
Every medication on the market works around the damage. None of them repair it.
Dr. Hadley spent 24 years prescribing these medications before realizing they were never designed to help diabetic men the way they help everyone else.
"We've been treating the symptom while ignoring the specific mechanism that makes diabetic ED different from regular ED," he says. "The micro-plaque. The structural vessel damage. The nerve degradation. Pills don't touch any of that."
April 2025. Endocrinology conference in San Diego.
Dr. Hadley ran into Dr. Patricia Walsh, 58, fellow endocrinologist, also Type 2 diabetic. Her husband had dealt with the same complication for nearly four years after his diagnosis.
"He fixed it. Completely. About seven months ago."
Dr. Hadley pushed back. "He's still diabetic. Once the vessels are damagedโ"
"I know what we've always taught," Dr. Walsh interrupted. "I'm telling you his imaging says otherwise."
She showed him a device. A ring made from hematite โ an iron oxide mineral โ combined with neodymium magnets.
It doesn't dilate damaged vessels. It repairs them.
The sustained low-level magnetic field generated by the ring triggers three biological responses that no pill on the market can produce:
Published clinical evidence supports this. Pelka et al., 2002 โ a double-blind, placebo-controlled study on impulse magnetic field therapy for erectile dysfunction โ found that 69% of the treatment group showed significant functional improvement. Placebo group: approximately 30%.
"Every medication tries to work around diabetic vascular damage," Dr. Hadley explains. "This is the first thing I've seen that actually undoes it."
He ordered the device in May 2025. Didn't tell Karen. He couldn't put hope in her eyes and fail again.
Karen's response: "It's not just the bedroom. You stand taller. You're more present with me. You joke around again. I didn't realize how much of you I'd lost until I got it back."
His A1C is still 6.9%. Still diabetic. Still managing. But the complication that was destroying his marriage? Reversed.
Dr. Hadley began recommending the device to diabetic patients suffering in silence.
The device is called Saravyn. It costs $39.90. Right now they're running a Buy 1 Get 1 Free offer.
If you've been told erectile dysfunction is just part of having diabetes, you were told wrong.
The vascular damage is real. But it's not permanent.
It's reversible. Dr. Hadley reversed it. His patients are reversing it.
The information provided on this page is not medical advice and should not replace consultation with a qualified healthcare provider. Always consult your physician before starting any new health regimen, especially if you have existing medical conditions or take prescription medications.
Individual results may vary. This advertorial reflects one physician's experience and the reported experiences of his patients. Saravyn is not a medical device and is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration.