Ascendant 2

Hemo Flow – Vidas Vitals
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Hemo Flow – Vidas Vitals
For Men Who Optimize Their Hormones

The One Thing Missing From Most Men's Hormone Protocol

You've dialed in your levels. Your energy should be there. Your performance should be there.
But something still feels off — and the answer is almost always in the blood itself.

See the 5 Signs  →

Takes 2 minutes. No pitch until the end.

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TRT is one of the most powerful tools in men's health.
It also thickens your blood. Most protocols never address that.

Testosterone increases red blood cell production — that's part of why it works. But more RBCs means thicker, more viscous blood. And thick blood creates a cascade of problems that no amount of optimized levels can fix on their own. If your protocol doesn't account for this, you're only solving half the equation.

Sign 1
Sign 1 of 5

You're still tired — even though your levels are optimized

You got on TRT for energy. Your labs look good. Your doctor says you're in range. But the fatigue is still there — and it doesn't make sense.

Here's what's happening: testosterone stimulates erythropoiesis — your body produces more red blood cells. That raises hematocrit. And when hematocrit climbs, blood thickens. Thick blood moves slower. Your tissues, muscles, and organs get less oxygen per unit of time — not because your RBC count is low, but because the blood carrying them can't circulate efficiently.

More red blood cells doesn't automatically mean better oxygen delivery. When blood gets too viscous, the system slows down — and fatigue persists despite optimal hormone levels. Your levels aren't the problem. Your blood flow is.
"Labs were perfect. Still exhausted. Nobody told me elevated hematocrit could do this."
Sign 2
Sign 2 of 5

Your blood pressure is creeping up — and you're fit, eat clean, and train hard

This is the sign that frustrates men on TRT the most. You're doing everything right. You're lean, you train, you're not eating garbage. And your blood pressure is still edging up, year over year.

TRT-related blood pressure elevation is frequently viscosity-driven, not vasculature-driven. When blood is thick, it creates mechanical resistance as it moves through vessels. Your heart compensates by pushing harder. Pressure rises — not because your arteries are damaged, but because the fluid inside them is too thick.

Vasodilators and standard BP supplements address the walls of your vessels. They don't address the thickness of what's moving through them. If your blood is the problem, relaxing the walls won't solve it.
"Eating clean, training 5 days a week. BP still going up. Finally understood it was the TRT thickening my blood."

Recognizing these? There are 3 more — and they all trace back to the same root cause.

See What's Driving It
Sign 3
Sign 3 of 5

Your gym pump is flat and your cardio capacity feels worse than it should

TRT should improve your performance. For many men it does — at first. But after a while, the pump diminishes. Cardio starts feeling harder than your fitness level explains. You're working the same but getting less.

The pump is a blood delivery event. It requires your cardiovascular system to force blood into working muscle faster than it drains. When blood viscosity rises, the microvasculature — the tiny capillary network feeding your muscle — gets congested. Red blood cells, which need to flex and deform to pass through narrow capillaries, become too stiff to do so efficiently.

Higher testosterone raises your RBC count, which should help performance. But if those RBCs are too rigid to navigate your capillary network, the benefit disappears. You have more blood cells — they just can't get where they need to go.
"Performance was great for 6 months. Then it plateaued and nobody could explain why."
Sign 4
Sign 4 of 5

You're donating blood to manage hematocrit — but the symptoms keep coming back

Therapeutic phlebotomy is the standard recommendation for elevated hematocrit on TRT. And it works — temporarily. Donate blood, hematocrit drops, symptoms ease. But within weeks it's climbing again, and the cycle repeats.

Phlebotomy reduces red blood cell volume. It doesn't address fibrin — the clotting protein that accumulates in plasma and contributes directly to blood viscosity independent of hematocrit. Men on TRT often have elevated fibrin levels that phlebotomy doesn't touch. That's why the thick-blood symptoms return faster than the hematocrit numbers alone would predict.

If you're donating every 8–12 weeks and still feeling the effects of thick blood between donations, fibrin accumulation is likely a significant part of what you're dealing with. Hematocrit is only one variable.
"Donating every 10 weeks. Felt better for a month then right back to the same symptoms."

4 for 4? One more — and it's the one most men on TRT don't connect to blood at all.

See Sign 5 + The Fix
Sign 5
Sign 5 of 5

Your mental clarity is inconsistent — brain fog that doesn't fit your hormone levels

Your testosterone is optimized. Cognitively, you should be sharp. But the clarity comes and goes. Afternoons are slow. Focus is unreliable. It doesn't match the labs.

Your brain consumes 20% of cardiac output — more than any other organ relative to its mass. When blood viscosity rises, cerebral perfusion — the rate at which blood flows through brain tissue — drops. Not dramatically, but measurably. The result is intermittent cognitive sluggishness that has nothing to do with your hormone levels and everything to do with how efficiently blood is reaching your brain.

Most men on TRT who experience brain fog assume it's a dosing issue or an estrogen problem. Many times it's neither. It's blood flow to the brain — and it's one of the first things that improves when viscosity is addressed.
"Adjusted my dose three times chasing the clarity. Turned out to be the blood thickness the whole time."

What Completes a TRT Protocol

TRT raises your red blood cell count. That's a feature, not a bug. But thick blood and fibrin accumulation are the downstream consequences most protocols never account for. Hemo Flow targets both — at the source.

2,000 FU — Primary
Nattokinase
A fibrinolytic enzyme that breaks down excess fibrin in plasma — the primary driver of viscosity that phlebotomy doesn't address. Dosed in fibrinolytic units (actual enzymatic activity), not milligrams. This is the ingredient TRT users need most.
120,000 SPU — Primary
Serrapeptase
Works synergistically with nattokinase to clear inflammatory proteins from plasma and microvasculature. Reduces the systemic inflammation that compounds TRT-related blood thickening over time.
600 mg
Aged Garlic Extract
Improves red blood cell deformability — the ability of RBCs to flex and pass through narrow capillaries. This is what restores gym pump and warms extremities. Critical when TRT has elevated RBC count.
500 mg
Olive Leaf Extract
Reduces peripheral vascular resistance — the friction blood encounters as it moves. Addresses the flow-side driver of blood pressure elevation, complementing standard BP management on TRT.
Clinical Dose
Vitamin C
Supports endothelial integrity and collagen structure in vessel walls. Works alongside olive leaf to reduce total resistance, supporting cardiovascular health under the increased demands TRT places on the system.
Full Panel COA
Third-Party Tested
Every batch independently verified for potency and purity. Certificate of analysis available on request. No proprietary blends — every dose is on the label exactly as formulated.

Where Hemo Flow Fits in Your Protocol

Most TRT protocols manage the hormone side. Hemo Flow manages the blood side. Together, they address what testosterone optimization alone can't.

Standard TRT Protocol
Testosterone · AI if needed · HCG if needed · Phlebotomy for hematocrit management
What's Usually Missing
Fibrin clearance · RBC flexibility support · Viscosity management between donation cycles
Hemo Flow Covers
Nattokinase clears fibrin · Aged garlic improves RBC flexibility · Serrapeptase reduces inflammatory proteins · Olive leaf lowers vascular resistance

Build It Into Your Protocol. Don't Run Out.

Blood viscosity management is ongoing — not a one-time fix. The men who see the biggest results are the ones who stay consistent through the full 8-week window and beyond.

Single Bottle
1 bottle · 30-day supply
$49.99
$49.99 / bottle
$1.67 / day
Most men see results at weeks 6–8. A single bottle may not cover the full cycle.
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Vidas Vitals Hemo Flow
★★★★★ 4.8 / 5.0

1,200+ verified reviews · 50,000+ men

Vidas Vitals™ Hemo Flow

Formulated specifically for the blood-side consequences of hormone optimization. Targets fibrin accumulation, RBC rigidity, and vascular resistance — the three drivers phlebotomy alone doesn't solve.

  • Nattokinase 2,000 FU — clears fibrin from plasma
  • Serrapeptase 120,000 SPU — reduces inflammatory proteins
  • Aged Garlic 600 mg — improves RBC deformability
  • Olive Leaf 500 mg — lowers peripheral vascular resistance
  • Vitamin C — supports endothelial integrity
  • Third-party tested — COA available on request
30-Day Money-Back Guarantee Try Hemo Flow for a full month. If you don't notice a difference in energy, circulation, or clarity — we'll refund every penny. Not because we have to. Because we're confident you won't need to ask.
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Common Questions

Yes — Hemo Flow is specifically designed to complement hormone protocols, not conflict with them. It stacks cleanly with testosterone, HCG, standard vitamins, magnesium, zinc, fish oil, and creatine. One important note: if you're on prescription anticoagulants (warfarin, Eliquis, Plavix), speak with your prescribing physician before adding nattokinase. It has mild fibrinolytic activity that can compound prescription blood thinners. For TRT without anticoagulants, it is safe to stack.
Phlebotomy reduces red blood cell volume and brings hematocrit down. What it doesn't address is fibrin — the clotting protein that accumulates in plasma and contributes to viscosity independent of your RBC count. Many men on TRT find their thick-blood symptoms return faster than their hematocrit numbers would predict, because fibrin is part of the picture. Hemo Flow targets fibrin directly via nattokinase. Most men use both — they're complementary, not competing approaches.
Most men report changes in energy, warmth, and cognitive clarity between weeks 4–7. Blood pressure shifts typically register around week 8. The fibrin clearance and RBC deformability improvements build systemically over time — they're not immediate. Don't judge it at week 3. That's why we recommend at minimum a 90-day supply. The men who quit early are the ones who never find out what consistent use does.
Milligrams measure weight. FU (fibrinolytic units) measure enzymatic activity — the actual potency of the nattokinase. Two products can list the same milligram dose but have drastically different activity levels depending on extract quality. 2,000 FU is the dose used in clinical research on nattokinase. Brands that list milligrams either don't know this or are obscuring weak doses behind a familiar unit. Cross-reference the research yourself.
Yes — always disclose supplements to your prescribing physician, especially on a managed protocol like TRT. Most doctors are familiar with nattokinase and serrapeptase. If your doctor monitors your hematocrit and CBC, adding Hemo Flow to the conversation gives them better context for interpreting your labs over time. Many men find their doctors are supportive once they understand what the ingredients do and why.
You're covered by a 30-day money-back guarantee — no forms, no hassle. That said: give it the time it needs. Blood viscosity management is not a week-one result. The guarantee exists so you can try it without financial risk, not as an exit ramp at week 2. Run it through at least 8 weeks before drawing conclusions.

* These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Individual results may vary. The testimonials and results depicted on this page reflect individual experiences and are not guaranteed to be typical. Consult your physician before starting any new supplement, particularly if you are currently prescribed hormone therapy, anticoagulants, or cardiovascular medications.