TechCrunch News 01月08日
Siren secures strategic funding for its socks that detect diabetic foot ulcers
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

Siren公司开发的智能袜,通过内置传感器监测足部温度,实时检测糖尿病足溃疡的早期迹象,已获得950万美元融资。该产品基于创始人Ran Ma在研究烧伤和退伍军人后手工制作的传感器袜,旨在预防糖尿病足溃疡。Siren智能袜能持续收集数据,据称可降低高达68%的糖尿病足溃疡风险和83%的截肢风险。该公司已累计融资4300万美元,吸引了包括Mölnlycke Health Care在内的多家投资机构。该领域竞争也在加剧,其他公司如Podimetrics和Orpyx也在开发相关产品。

🌡️Siren智能袜通过内置传感器监测足部温度,实时检测糖尿病足溃疡的早期迹象,为预防糖尿病足溃疡提供了新的解决方案。

💡该产品灵感来源于创始人Ran Ma在研究烧伤和退伍军人后,手工制作的传感器袜原型,体现了技术创新与实际需求的结合。

📈Siren智能袜据称能通过持续收集数据,降低高达68%的糖尿病足溃疡风险和83%的截肢风险,为患者带来福音。

💰Siren公司已累计融资4300万美元,吸引了包括Mölnlycke Health Care在内的多家投资机构,表明该领域具有广阔的市场前景。

After studying burn victims and war veterans, entrepreneur Ran Ma hand-made a sock that contained sensors to detect foot ulcers. Now, her company, Siren, has secured $9.5 million, with an $8 million check from lead investor Mölnlycke Health Care to further the development and adoption of its diabetic foot ulcer (DFU) prevention product. It’s now raised $43 million to date.

About 830 million people worldwide have diabetes, over a third of whom can develop debilitating ulcers in their lifetime, which can lead to severe complications, and even amputations in some cases. 

Siren’s product, Siren Socks, detects early signs of potential foot injuries by sensing a patient’s foot temperature and detecting hotspots that indicate potential ulcers in real-time. The company claims it can reduce the risk of DFUs by up to 68% and amputations by 83% by collecting data continuously.

“I studied biomedical engineering at Johns Hopkins and at Northwestern University,” Ma told TechCrunch. While there, she worked at a wound lab to “create a biomask to regenerate the human face for burn victims and war veterans,” she said.

Ma dropped out of school twice — once from Northwestern, and then from Copenhagen Business School — but eventually she hand-sewed the first prototype of the Siren sock with sensors she’d bought from RadioShack and a leftover Arduino board from Maker Faire. “I then paid a tailor in Chinatown to sew my second prototype with multiple sensors and created the first continuous temperature-monitoring socks,” she said.

In 2017, the startup won TechCrunch’s Hardware Battlefield contest at Disrupt. Since then, Siren has raised funding from Khosla Ventures, among others, pulling in $11.8 million in a Series B. It has now added DCM, Founders Fund and Manta Ray Ventures to its cap table, and Mölnlycke is its first strategic investor.

The space is clearly warming up, to coin a phrase. Competitor Podimetrics has raised over $98 million for its temperature-sensing mat, while Orpyx, which makes a pressure-sensing insole, recently raised $20 million in growth capital.

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

Siren 智能袜 糖尿病足溃疡 医疗科技 传感器
相关文章