Built by someone who
lived the problem.
Cura was inspired by a personal health experience from someone on our team — a 29-year-old who, on paper, looked fine. Three different specialists had reviewed different slices of his data over two years. Every visit ended the same way: “everything looks normal, see you next time.”
What none of them had — and what he didn’t realize he had himself — was all of his data in one place. Labs from a cardio workup. A 23andMe report uploaded once and forgotten. Imaging from a full-body screen. A wearable tracking sleep, HRV, respiration. Symptoms in a notes app. Each piece individually unremarkable. Together — once you actually read them together — they told a different story.
Testosterone drifting downward across multiple draws. A genetic variant affecting androgen conversion. A wearable showing micro-arousals through the night and oxygen dipping into the 80s. A whisper of arterial stiffening at 29. A childhood facial injury he hadn’t thought about in twenty years.
The picture only resolved when those signals stopped being treated as separate complaints. They were one complaint. They pointed to sleep-disordered breathing — undiagnosed for years, driving every downstream finding above. A formal sleep study confirmed it. With the cause finally named, treatment is in motion — and Cura now keeps the longitudinal view as the markers respond.