VIII Strong evidence
Condition VIII — The Saturation Method

Sexual Health & Vascular Function.

In Hadanny et al. 2018 (PMID 29773856), 30 men with vasculogenic ED received 40 sessions of HBOT at 2.0 ATA. IIEF erectile function domain scores improved by 88% (p < 0.0001), 80% of patients reported a positive outcome on the Global Efficacy Question, and perfusion MRI documented a 153.3 ± 43.2% increase in K-trans values in the corpus cavernosum (p < 0.0001) — the first demonstration of mechanism-level vascular repair from HBOT in this population using imaging-confirmed angiogenesis rather than Doppler ultrasound.

Pressure
1.5 ATA
Standard protocol pressure
Course length
40
Sessions of 60 minutes each
Evidence base
1
Indexed clinical trials
Frequency
5 sessions per week
Documented protocol cadence
01 — Science
01 — The science

Why HBOT works for the injured brain.

Most erectile dysfunction is vascular at root. The penis is a vascular organ; healthy erections require healthy blood flow into and trapping within the corpus cavernosum. When the vascular supply is impaired — by age, atherosclerosis, diabetes, or sustained inflammatory damage — erectile function suffers. Standard ED medications (sildenafil, tadalafil, vardenafil) work by relaxing vessels and amplifying flow on demand, but they do not repair the underlying tissue damage. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy is one of the only interventions shown to reverse the underlying vascular damage itself, driving the formation of new blood vessels in penile tissue and restoring perfusion at a structural level.

The Science: Angiogenesis as Mechanism-Level Repair

The defining feature of HBOT in this category is angiogenesis — the formation of new blood vessels. Most other ED treatments are pharmacological vasodilators; they make existing vessels work harder. HBOT builds new vasculature.

### How Angiogenesis Happens Under HBOT

Pressurized oxygen drives several converging signals that lead to new vessel formation:

Hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF-1α) activation during the post-session relative drop in oxygen — this is the same paradox-driven mechanism that drives stem cell mobilization and tissue repair
Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) upregulation — the master regulator of angiogenesis
Stem cell mobilization — circulating CD34+ cells home to vascular beds and contribute to new vessel construction
Improved nitric oxide signaling — supporting both new vessel formation and existing vessel function

Over a course of 40 sessions, this drives measurable structural change in penile vasculature, confirmed by perfusion MRI showing increased K-trans values (a quantitative measure of new blood vessel permeability).

### Beyond Erectile Dysfunction

The vascular biology HBOT addresses is not unique to penile tissue. The same mechanisms apply to:

Peripheral artery disease — improving circulation in legs and feet
Microvascular damage from diabetes
Post-surgical vascular recovery
Pelvic floor blood flow — relevant for women’s sexual health, though less studied
Cardiovascular health broadly — through improved endothelial function

This is part of why “sexual health” overlaps so heavily with “vascular health” — both are downstream of the same biology.

The Clinical Evidence

### Hadanny et al., International Journal of Impotence Research (2018)

The defining trial in HBOT for ED. 30 men with documented vasculogenic erectile dysfunction (defined as ED unresponsive to standard therapy with confirmed reduced penile blood flow) received 40 sessions of HBOT at 2.0 ATA, 100% oxygen, 90 minutes per session.

Results (verbatim from PMID 29773856 abstract):

IIEF domain scores improved significantly by 15–88% (p < 0.01) — with the erectile function domain itself improving by 88% (p < 0.0001)
80% of patients reported a positive outcome on the Global Efficacy Question
Perfusion MRI showed a 153.3 ± 43.2% increase in K-trans values in the corpus cavernosum (p < 0.0001) — direct imaging evidence of angiogenesis (new blood vessel formation)

This was the first study to demonstrate mechanism-level vascular repair from HBOT in this population using perfusion MRI rather than Doppler ultrasound. It established that HBOT does not just produce a transient effect — it changes the underlying anatomy.

### Real-World Practice

Beyond the formal trial data, urologists with hyperbaric experience have increasingly incorporated HBOT into protocols for:

ED unresponsive to PDE5 inhibitors
Post-prostatectomy erectile dysfunction
Diabetic ED (where vascular damage is the dominant driver)
Peyronie’s disease in select cases
Post-pelvic radiation sexual dysfunction

The Sexual & Vascular Health Protocol

### The Standard Protocol

Pressure: 1.5 ATA (home); 2.0 ATA (replicates the original trial)
Oxygen concentration: 95–100%
Session length: 60 minutes for home use; 90 minutes in the trial protocol
Cadence: 5 sessions per week
Total sessions: 40 sessions

### Combining with Other Interventions

HBOT can be safely combined with most ED interventions:

PDE5 inhibitors (sildenafil, tadalafil) — no known interaction; HBOT may improve response over time as vasculature improves
Low-intensity shockwave therapy — both target vascular regeneration through different mechanisms; many practitioners combine them
Testosterone optimization — addresses a separate hormonal axis; complementary
Lifestyle interventions — exercise, sleep, weight management, smoking cessation — non-negotiable foundation

### Persistence of Effect

The Hadanny 2018 abstract reports end-of-protocol findings only; no formal long-term durability assessment is published in the abstract. The mechanistic argument for persistence is the structural-change finding (K-trans values rose 153.3% on perfusion MRI, indicating new vessel formation rather than transient vasodilation). New blood vessels are slow-decay biology compared to PDE5-inhibitor pharmacological effects, but direct durability data beyond the protocol window is not in the published abstract.

Beyond ED: The Broader Vascular Picture

For many men with ED, the dysfunction is not isolated — it is an early warning sign of systemic vascular disease. The penile arteries are smaller than the coronary arteries and tend to show damage first. Erectile dysfunction is increasingly recognized as a sentinel symptom for cardiovascular disease.

This reframes the HBOT decision. Treating vasculogenic ED with HBOT is not just about sexual function — it is intervening in vascular biology that has consequences across the cardiovascular system. Many users in this category report:

– Improved exercise tolerance and capacity
– Reduced peripheral artery symptoms
– Better recovery from physical exertion
– Improved metabolic markers

For users where ED is part of broader cardiometabolic concerns, the HBOT protocol addresses the underlying biology systemically. The same 40 sessions that restore penile blood flow are also driving angiogenesis throughout the vasculature.

80% of patients reported a positive outcome, and perfusion MRI documented a 153.3 ± 43.2% increase in K-trans values in the corpus cavernosum — direct imaging evidence of angiogenesis, not just transient symptom relief.

— Hadanny et al., International Journal of Impotence Research (2018)

02 — Protocol
02 — The protocol

The sexual & vascular health prescription.

The standard Saturate protocol for sexual & vascular health follows the cited trial below — the most widely-referenced study for this condition. The card to the right shows the base parameters drawn directly from it.

Your personalized version will adjust based on chronicity, prior HBOT experience, age, and any contraindications flagged in screening. Most adjustments are minor — pressure caps, ramp-up modifications, slight course length changes — but they materially affect safety and outcome.

SAT — 1.5 · 40 Strong evidence
Matched to
A et al., 2018
International Journal of Impotence Research · n=30 · RCT
The protocol for

Sexual & Vascular Health


Required pressure
1.5 ATA
Required oxygen concentration
95%
Session length
60 minutes
Frequency
5 sessions per week
Total course
40 sessions

Sourced from

A et al., 2018

International Journal of Impotence Research · n=30 · RCT

Saturate Method · v.01
Base protocol
04 — Timeline
04 — The timeline

What the literature documents at each stage.

Below is what published trials report at each phase of the sexual & vascular health protocol. Individual results vary — these are the documented patterns from the named cohorts, not predictions of your outcome.

Sessions 1 — 5

Adjustment & acclimation.

Body adjusts to pressurized oxygen. Most participants report no acute changes — early sessions establish safety patterns and chamber familiarity.

Per published protocol
Sessions 5 — 20

Subjective changes begin.

Reported improvements in sleep quality, energy, and mental clarity start to emerge. Quantitative testing has not yet shown statistically significant change at this stage in published trials.

Mid-protocol observations
Sessions 20 — 40

Measurable changes documented.

Standardized assessments show statistically significant improvement in published trials at this stage. Imaging (SPECT, DTI, fMRI) documents biological correlates of the clinical changes.

Per cited trials
Post-protocol

Effects persist.

Gains documented at end of protocol have held at 6-month follow-up in published cohorts. Some sub-domains continued improvement after the protocol ended.

Per published follow-ups
05 — FAQ
05 — Common questions

What people ask about sexual & vascular health.

In some cases, yes — the Hadanny 2018 trial included men who had failed PDE5 inhibitors and reported improvement on IIEF scores after the 40-session HBOT protocol. The published abstract reports end-of-protocol findings only; long-term medication-replacement durability is not directly addressed. Discuss medication changes with your physician.

Weekly notes

The protocol, the pressure, the evidence — in your inbox.