Health Tech

How Ultromics Is Focusing on Early Heart Failure Detection With Women’s Health in Mind

A new bet on early heart failure detection and why women’s health is at the center.

Updated

December 23, 2025 12:36 PM

A doctor holding an artificial heart model. PHOTO: ADOBE STOCK

Heart disease does not always announce itself clearly, especially in women. Many of the symptoms are ordinary, including fatigue, shortness of breath and swelling. These signs are frequently dismissed or explained away. As a result, many women are diagnosed late, when treatment options are narrower and outcomes are worse. That diagnostic gap is the context behind a recent investment involving Ultromics and the American Heart Association’s Go Red for Women Venture Fund.

Ultromics is a health technology company that uses artificial intelligence to help doctors spot early signs of heart failure from routine heart scans. It has received a strategic investment from the American Heart Association’s Go Red for Women Venture Fund.

The focus of the investment is a long-standing blind spot in cardiac care. Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction, or HFpEF, affects millions of people worldwide, with women disproportionately impacted. It is one of the most common forms of heart failure, yet also one of the hardest to diagnose. Studies even show women are twice as likely as men to develop the condition and around 64% of cases go undiagnosed in routine clinical practice.  

Ultromics works with a tool most patients already experience during heart care: the echocardiogram. There is no new scan and no added burden for patients. Its software analyzes standard heart ultrasound images and looks for subtle patterns that point to early heart failure. The goal is clarity. Give clinicians better signals earlier, before the disease advances.

“Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction is one of the most complex and overlooked diseases in cardiology. For too long, clinicians have been expected to diagnose it using tools that weren't built to detect it and as a result, many patients are identified too late,” said Ross Upton, PhD, CEO and Founder of Ultromics. “By augmenting physicians' decision making with EchoGo, we can help them recognize disease at an earlier stage and treat it more effectively.”

The stakes are high. Research suggests women are twice as likely as men to develop the condition and that a majority of cases are missed in routine clinical practice. That delay matters. New therapies can reduce hospitalizations and improve survival, but only if patients are diagnosed in time.

This is why early detection has become a priority for mission-driven investors. “Closing the diagnostic gap by recognizing disease before irreversible damage occurs is critical to improving health for women—and everyone,” said Tracy Warren, Senior Managing Director, Go Red for Women Venture Fund. “We are gratified to see technologies, such as this one, that are accepted by leading institutions as advances in the field of cardiovascular diagnostics. That's the kind of progress our fund was created to accelerate.”

Ultromics’ platform is already cleared by regulators for clinical use and is being deployed in hospitals across the US and UK. The company says its technology has analyzed hundreds of thousands of heart scans, helping clinicians reach clearer conclusions when traditional methods fall short.

Taken together, the investment reflects a broader shift in healthcare. Attention is shifting earlier—toward detection instead of reaction. Toward tools that fit into existing care rather than complicate it. In this case, the funding is not about introducing something new into the system. It is about seeing what has long been missed—and doing so in time.

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Top 5 Sci-Fi Films of 2026 (No Spoilers)

From AI love affairs to cosmic survival, 2026 has it all.

Updated

November 27, 2025 3:26 PM

Grab your popcorn—2026 is going to be a huge year for sci-fi fans. Big stories are hitting the big screen, from survival epics on a ruined Earth to time-bending adventures and eerie tales of AI love gone wrong. Some are fresh takes, others are long-awaited sequels, but all promise to keep you talking long after the credits roll. Here are five sci-fi movies you’ll want to mark on your calendar.

1. Soulm8te

Release Date: January 9, 2026

Director:  Kate Dolan

Stars: Lily Sullivan, David Rysdahl and Claudia Doumit

Soulm8te will take you to a dark AI universe. The film follows a grieving man who turns to an AI android to ease the pain of losing his wife. At first, the relationship feels like a second chance at love, but the bond soon spirals into a dangerous romance.

Noting how companion-style robots already exist in parts of the world, Wan and executive producer Allison Williams wanted to reimagine technology in the form of a female humanoid built for intimacy. Wan, who also directed M3GAN 2.0, another chilling story centered on an AI doll, brings that same unsettling vision to Soulm8te. Ultimately, what begins as comfort soon twists into obsession, turning desire into a deadly consequence.

2. Greenland: Migration
Promotional poster for the film Greenland 2: Migration. PHOTO: Rotten Tomatoes

Release Date: January 9, 2026

Director:  Ric Roman Waugh,

Stars: Morena Baccarin, Amber Rose Revah, Sophie Thompson, Trond Fausa Aurvåg

Back in 2020, Greenland introduced audiences to John Garrity (Gerard Butler), a father racing against time to save his family as fragments of a comet threatened to wipe out life on Earth. The story ended with humanity’s last hope lying in survival bunkers deep in Greenland.

The sequel, Greenland: Migration, picks up several years later as the Garrity family emerges from shelter into a devastated world. Now set in post-apocalyptic Europe, John must lead his family across a dangerous wasteland in search of a new home. With survival once again at stake, the journey promises both peril and resilience.

3. Project Hail Mary
Promotional poster for the film Project Hail Mary. PHOTO: Rotten Tomatoes

Release Date: March 20, 2026

Director: Phil Lord & Chris Miller

Stars: Ryan Gosling, Milana Vayntrub, Sandra Hüller

Andy Weir’s sci-fi novel Project Hail Mary (from the author of The Martian) is headed to the big screen, with Ryan Gosling starring as Ryland Grace. Once a junior high science teacher, Grace wakes up inside a spaceship with no memory of who he is or why he’s there. He’s been in a coma for nearly four years, kept alive by advanced robotic arms that fed and rotated his body. Slowly, he recalls the truth: this is a suicide mission, with no fuel or food to bring him back home.  

Turns out, his path to space began when Eva Stratt, head of a global task force, recruited him after reading his paper on alien survival without water. Now Grace must stop a deadly infestation of star-eating microbes called “astrophage” before they wipe out life on Earth.