Deep Breathe develops AI-assisted diagnostic software for point-of-care ultrasound, designed to support accurate, real-time clinical decision-making across hospital, pre-hospital, and operational settings.
Deep Breathe offers two core solutions:
Our technology is hardware-agnostic, designed for real-world deployment, and trained on large, clinically relevant datasets. It is built with field, pre-hospital, and hospital use in mind, not limited to idealized clinical environments, and developed in close partnership with operational users.
We work with military, pre-hospital, and hospital partners. Current collaborations include branches of the Canadian Special Operations Forces and U.S. Special Forces, as well as the U.S. Army, Marines, Navy, and Air Force, alongside pilot deployments with hospital systems.
Deep Breathe has FDA 510(k) clearance for our B-line model, and we are actively pursuing regulatory approvals for the broader ATLAS platforms.
The best way to learn more is to reach out directly. We work with organizations to explore fit, pilot deployments, training, and pathways to scaled adoption.
We partner with military organizations to deploy ATLAS in an educational capacity, and support training, evaluation, and deployment of AI-assisted ultrasound across the continuum of care, from point of injury to higher-role facilities, focusing on scalability and operational realism.
Deep Breathe helps EMS agencies scale ultrasound use by reducing training burden and providing consistent, AI-assisted diagnostic support for providers with varying levels of experience.
In hospitals, our solutions support rapid bedside diagnosis of pneumothorax detection, helping reduce delays, minimize unnecessary chest X-rays, and streamline post-procedure workflows.
No. Deep Breathe’s software runs locally on-device and does not require internet connectivity for clinical use.
Our software is hardware-agnostic and designed to work with existing ultrasound devices and clinical workflows, deploying on standard iOS and Android platforms.
Yes. ATLASim is available today for education and training use, and we actively partner with organizations on pilot deployments, onboarding, and phased implementation of clinical solutions.
Organizations can start by reaching out to discuss goals, use cases, and readiness. We work collaboratively to design evaluations, support training, and plan for scalable deployment.