Folz21
2.2K posts


My statement on Iran-related hostilities in the Middle East:

An Israeli startup just gave every doctor on earth the ability to read a cardiac ultrasound like a cardiologist. The company is called AISAP. And most people have never heard of them. Right now, reading a cardiac ultrasound requires a cardiologist. The cardiologist has a waiting list. The echo lab has a queue. The patient waits days. Sometimes weeks. In Ghana, where there are fewer than 30 cardiologists for 35 million people, the wait doesn't exist because the cardiologist doesn't exist. Up to 6% of everyone over 65 walks into an ER today with undetected valve disease and goes home without a diagnosis. AISAP takes a standard bedside ultrasound, runs it through AI trained on 24 million echo video clips, and hands any doctor a cardiologist-level report in five minutes. The FDA cleared it in August 2024. Tests at Mass General Brigham showed their results matched a team of three cardiologists, more consistently than any single cardiologist alone. In a prospective study, AISAP changed the care pathway for 1 in 3 patients scanned. One in three. A 39-year-old woman came into an ER three weeks after a C-section with chest pain. She was being discharged. Her last echo was normal. AISAP found her heart pumping less than a third of what it needed to survive. She didn't go home. Born at Sheba Medical Center by a team of Unit 8200 veterans and cardiologists who couldn't walk away from a broken system. Validated at Mayo Clinic, Mass General Brigham, Thomas Jefferson, and Stanford. Now deployed across U.S. health systems and in Ghana. The former director of the Mossad joined their Strategic Board. Tamir Pardo doesn't back things that don't work. This is only the cardiac platform. Kidney disease, aortic aneurysm, blood clots, pneumonia, all in development. One probe. Any doctor. Anywhere on earth. So to everyone boycotting Israeli technology, genuine question. If this could catch your mother's failing heart before she gets sent home from the ER, are you going to check where it was built first? Didn't think so. Shoutout to the team at AISAP. They left the army and went to war on a different front. The one where the enemy is a waiting list and the casualty is the patient who goes home not knowing. What they gave the world is the ability to provide critical diagnoses anywhere, anytime, without the need for a dedicated expert. A paradigm shift that could save countless lives. Built in Israel. For everyone. For the full story: sharingfromisrael.substack.com/p/israeli-star…





























