If you're diabetic and your Viagra dose keeps going up — or if you've already moved past pills to injections — read this.
Your protocol only moves in one direction. Higher dose. Different drug. Injections. Implant. Nobody in that protocol ever stops to ask: can the thing that's actually broken be fixed instead of bypassed?
This is what a 2022 study published in Biomedicines found — and why urologists across the country are quietly changing what they recommend first.

Viagra preserves whatever nitric oxide your body is still producing. That's its entire mechanism. It catches what's left and holds onto it longer.
Which means when your body stops making enough — the pill has nothing to work with. The dose goes up. It becomes unreliable. Then one night it stops working entirely.
For diabetic men, this isn't a slow decline. High blood sugar flips an inflammatory switch called NF-κB inside your blood vessels. That switch causes the cells responsible for producing nitric oxide to reverse — producing a free radical that destroys it instead.
Your factories aren't slowing down. They're running backwards. And no dose of Viagra fixes a factory in reverse.

50mg. 100mg. Pump. Trimix. Implant.
The protocol only moves forward. Compensate. Escalate. Bypass. Each step assumes the factory that produces nitric oxide is permanently offline. Nobody ever tests that assumption.
Nobody asks: can the factory be turned back on?
Because turning it back on isn't a drug. It isn't a device. It isn't billable the same way. It's a compound that shuts off a switch — and the research on that compound is sitting in a journal most urologists have never opened.

Capsanthin — the deep red pigment in cayenne pepper — directly shuts off the NF-κB inflammatory switch that causes the factory reversal in diabetic men.
When that switch turns off, your cells stop producing superoxide. They recouple. They go back to producing nitric oxide from scratch. Not preserving what's left. Not bypassing the factory. Actually restoring it.
Published in Biomedicines, 2022. Confirmed in human endothelial cells.

Viagra at 100mg twice a week: $200–$400 a month. Trimix with supplies and office visits: even more. That's $2,400 to $5,000+ a year for treatments that manage decline while your factories keep deteriorating underneath.
You're already spending thousands on a protocol that only moves in one direction. For a fraction of that, you spend 8 weeks finding out if your factories can move in the other direction instead.

This is the part the clinical data doesn't capture.
But what the doctors kept hearing wasn't about numbers. It was about the wives.
If three or more of those describe you, your factories are likely running in reverse right now. And no dose increase or protocol escalation will fix that.

Pharmaceutical-grade capsanthin with black pepper extract for absorption. Grape seed oil. Beetroot extract. Curcumin. Vitamin K2. Full vascular support. Softgel delivery that bypasses your stomach entirely. Safe with metformin, statins, and blood pressure medications.
This isn't cayenne in a pill. It's a complete factory restoration system.
Every month you wait, those factories fall further behind. The men who see the best results are the ones who start before the damage becomes irreversible.