Supplemental breast ultrasound fills a gap that mammography alone cannot always close, particularly in patients with dense breast tissue where the sensitivity of mammography drops substantially. For a women's imaging center, a breast surgery practice, or a dedicated breast health program, adding ultrasound capability means answering clinical questions the primary modality leaves open. The scan goes where the question is, at the bedside or in the procedure room, and the financing should move as quickly as the clinical need requires.
Breast ultrasound systems span a meaningful price range depending on whether the practice needs a general-purpose platform that handles breast studies alongside other protocols, or a dedicated whole-breast or automated breast ultrasound (ABUS) system optimized specifically for screening in dense-breast populations. Either way, we can structure financing that fits the monthly cash flow picture without tying up capital that could go toward staffing, facility, or the next piece of equipment in the queue.