Sometimes it is a good idea to go to the dark side, particularly for individuals with undiagnosed vision impairment. Dark adaptation is one of the first aspects of vision to become impaired by age-related macular degeneration (AMD), so identifying it at early stages can preserve sight. Heru Inc. recently launched a new modality for its wearable screening platform to quickly assess dark adaptation.
Heru Inc. has raised $30 million in a series A financing to support the further development of its artificial intelligence (AI)-enabled, wearable eye diagnostic and vision correction platform. D1 Capital Partners led the round, with participation from Softbank Ventures Opportunity Fund, Maurice Ferre, Frederic Moll, Krillion Ventures and a consortium of investors with expertise in developing, launching and scaling medical technologies.
Heru Inc., a medical technology company using artificial intelligence (AI) to advance vision diagnostics and augmentation, has completed class I device registration with the U.S. FDA for its cloud-based diagnostic application for visual field exams. Heru’s software works with commercially available augmented reality or virtual reality (AR/VR) headsets to provide a subjective visual field exam, with results immediately available to clinicians through a web portal.