Nancy felt the same way. Three years of compression socks, water pills, and elevation. Nothing fixed the swelling. Her doctor told her “gravity always wins eventually.”
Then Dr. Evans told her something no other doctor had: the standard treatments can’t fix this because they don’t address the pump.
Compression squeezes from outside. Pills drain fluid through the kidneys. Neither one restarts the dormant motor nerves that control the calf pump.
EMS is a fundamentally different approach. It doesn’t squeeze or drain. It fires the motor nerves directly and forces the muscles to contract. That’s the pump turning on. Nancy felt it on the first use.
“Is it safe for my age?”
Nancy is 66. The device has 99 intensity levels starting from barely perceptible. She controls it with a simple remote. No stockings to wrestle on. No pills depleting her electrolytes. She uses it in her recliner watching TV for 15 minutes.
Note: Not recommended for people with pacemakers or implanted defibrillators.
“My doctor said this is just what happens with age.”
Nancy’s first doctor said the same thing. “Degenerative. Gravity always wins.” Then Dr. Evans — a vascular specialist — explained that the pump can be restarted. The motor nerves aren’t dead. They’re dormant. Different thing entirely. Nancy’s ankles have shape again. She can see the bones. Gravity didn’t win.
“Is this just a fancy foot massager?”
No. Foot massagers use vibration — they shake your skin. This uses EMS — electrical impulses that force your calf muscles to contract.
You’ll see the difference on the first use: your calves will visibly twitch and squeeze. That’s the pump firing. If the muscles aren’t contracting, the device isn’t working. This one contracts them.
“What if it doesn’t work for me?”
100-day money-back guarantee. Full refund including shipping. Nancy’s attitude was practical: “If it doesn’t work, I send it back. No risk except a few days of trying.” She didn’t need to send hers back.