The Danger That Grows in Silence
Heart failure doesn’t arrive with a warning.
For millions of people, it builds quietly over months — subtle changes in the heart that no one can feel, see, or measure at home. By the time symptoms appear, the damage is already done, and the window for early intervention has closed.
But what if silence didn’t have to mean uncertainty?
What if those invisible signals could be captured clearly and effortlessly, long before they become dangerous?
That’s exactly where the breakthrough begins.
Heart failure affects more than 50 million people worldwide and remains one of the leading causes of hospitalization and death, growing by over 10% every year.
Beyond those already diagnosed, 15% of people over 65 are silently at risk — often without knowing it.
Yet despite major advances in medicine, detection is still reactive, not preventive. Most patients are diagnosed only after irreversible damage has already occurred. Implantable monitors are invasive and costly, while skin-patch wearables struggle with comfort, acceptance, and long-term adherence.
The result is a critical gap: clinicians have no accessible way to detect heart failure decompensation early - when earlier intervention could make a meaningful difference.